ArXiv TLDR

Nonequilibrium Kramers Turnover in a Kerr Parametric Oscillator

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2604.19527

Daniel K. J. Boneß, Gabriel Margiani, Wolfgang Belzig, Alexander Eichler, Oded Zilberberg

cond-mat.mes-hallcond-mat.stat-mechphysics.class-ph

TLDR

This paper demonstrates and isolates a nonequilibrium Kramers turnover in a Kerr parametric oscillator using a novel rescaling method and experimental validation.

Key contributions

  • Analytically established Kramers turnover in a driven-dissipative Kerr parametric oscillator.
  • Introduced a novel rescaling method to isolate turnover by tuning effective friction and temperature.
  • Experimentally observed a distinct crossover in phase slip rates in a micro-electromechanical device.

Why it matters

This work extends the fundamental concept of Kramers turnover to out-of-equilibrium systems, which are prevalent in modern technologies. By overcoming previous limitations, it provides a robust framework for understanding noise-induced switching in nonlinear driven-dissipative systems.

Original Abstract

Activation processes govern noise-induced switching between long-lived states. In an equilibrium double well, the thermally activated switching rate exhibits a prefactor with a nonmonotonic dependence on environmental coupling, a foundational crossover known as Kramers turnover. Here, we demonstrate a Kramers turnover analogue in a Kerr parametric oscillator, a driven-dissipative nonlinear system featuring two stable phase states. First, we analytically establish turnover physics in this out-of-equilibrium setting. There, the strong physical correlation between the activation barrier and intrinsic damping fundamentally obscures the underlying turnover physics. To overcome this limitation, we rescale the rotating-frame dynamics and introduce a tunable effective friction controlled entirely by the parametric drive. This rescaling comes at the cost of a concurrent rescaling of the effective temperature. Exploiting this simultaneous scaling, we leverage the effective temperature to extract the turnover directly from temperature-dependent observations. Subsequently, measuring noise-induced phase slips in a micro-electromechanical device, we observe a distinct crossover in the prefactor's temperature dependence. Our results unambiguously isolate the out-of-equilibrium turnover regime and highlight that the competition between dissipation and fluctuations profoundly shapes activation dynamics also beyond equilibrium.

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