The Dicke model is a
quantum mechanical model that describes the coupling between a single-mode cavity and N
two-level systems, or equivalently N
spin-1/2 degrees of freedom. The model was first introduced in 1973 by
K. Hepp and
E. H. Lieb. Their study was inspired by the pioneering work of
R. H. Dicke on the
superradiant emission of light in free space and named after him. Like any other model in quantum mechanics, the Dicke model includes a set of quantum states (the
Hilbert space) and a total-energy
operator (the
Hamiltonian). The
Hilbert space of the Dicke model is given by (the tensor product of) the states of the cavity and of the two-level systems. The Hilbert space of the cavity can be spanned by
Fock states with n
photons, denoted by |n\rangle. These states can be constructed from the vacuum state |n=0\rangle using the canonical
ladder operators, a^\dagger and a, which add and subtract a photon from the cavity, respectively. The states of each two-level system are referred to as
up and
down and are defined through the
spin operators \vec\sigma_j = (\sigma^x_j,~\sigma^y_j,~\sigma^z_j), satisfying the
spin algebra [\sigma^x_j,~\sigma^y_k]=i\hbar\sigma^z_j\delta_{j,k}. Here \hbar is the reduced
Planck constant and j = (0,1,2,...,N) indicates a specific two-level system. The
Hamiltonian of the Dicke model is {{NumBlk2|:| H = \hbar\omega_c a^\dagger a +\omega_z \sum_{j=1}^N \sigma^z_j +\frac{2\lambda}{\sqrt{N}} (a+a^\dagger) \sum_j \sigma^x_j\;. Here, the first term describes the energy of the cavity and is equal to the product of the energy of a single cavity photon \hbar\omega_c (where \omega_c is the cavity frequency), times the number of photons in the cavity, n_c=a^\dagger a. The second term describes the energy of the two-level systems, where \hbar\omega_z is the energy difference between the states of each two-level system. The last term describes the coupling between the two-level systems and the cavity and is assumed to be proportional to a constant, \lambda, times the inverse of the square root of the number of two-level systems. This assumption allows one to obtain a phase transition in the limit of N\to\infty (see
below). The coupling can be written as the sum of two terms: a
co-rotating term that conserves the number of excitations and is proportional to a \sigma^+ + a^\dagger \sigma^- and a
counter-rotating term proportional to a \sigma^- + a^\dagger \sigma^+, where \sigma^\pm = \sigma^x \pm i \sigma^y are the spin ladder operators. The
Hamiltonian in Eq. assumes that all the spins are identical (i.e. have the same energy difference and are equally coupled to the cavity). Under this assumption, one can define the macroscopic spin operators S^\alpha=\sum_{j=1}^N\sigma_j^\alpha, with \alpha=x,y,z, which satisfy the
spin algebra, [S^x,S^y]=i\hbar S^z. Using these operators, one can rewrite the
Hamiltonian in Eq. as {{NumBlk2|:| H=\hbar\omega_c a^\dagger a+\omega_z S^z+\frac{2\lambda}{\sqrt{N}}(a+a^\dagger)S^x. |2}} This notation simplifies the numerical study of the model because it involves a single spin-S with S\leq N/2, whose Hilbert space has size 2S+1, rather than N spin-1/2, whose Hilbert space has size 2^N. The Dicke model has one
global symmetry, {{NumBlk2|:| \mathcal{P} : (a,\sigma^\pm ) \to (-a,-\sigma^\pm)\;. Because \mathcal{P} squares to unity (i.e. if applied twice, it brings each state back to its original state), it has two eigenvalues, 1 and -1. This symmetry is associated with a
conserved quantity: the parity of the total number of excitations, P=(-1)^{N_{ex}}, where {{NumBlk2|:| N_{ex}=a^\dagger a + \sum_{j=1}^N\sigma^z_j\;. This parity conservation can be seen from the fact that each term in the Hamiltonian preserves the excitation number, except for the counter-rotating terms, which can only change the excitation number by \pm 2. A state of the Dicke model is said to be
normal when this symmetry is preserved, and
superradiant when this symmetry is spontaneously broken.
Related models The Dicke model is closely related to other models of quantum optics. Specifically, the Dicke model with a single two-level system, N=1, is called the
Rabi model. In the absence of counter-rotating terms, the model is called
Jaynes-Cummings for N=1 and Tavis-Cummings for N>1. These two models conserve the number of excitations N_{ex} and are characterized by a U(1) symmetry. The spontaneous breaking of this symmetry gives rise to a lasing state (see
below). The relation between the Dicke model and other models is summarized in the table below == Superradiant phase transition ==