Signatures of rare states and thermalization in a theory with confinement
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| Publication date | 31-08-2018 |
| Number of pages | 29 |
| Publisher | Ithaca, NY: ArXiv |
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| Abstract |
There is a dichotomy in the nonequilibrium dynamics of quantum many body
systems. In the presence of integrability, expectation values of local
operators equilibrate to values described by a generalized Gibbs
ensemble, which retains extensive memory about the initial state of the
system. On the other hand, in generic systems such expectation values
relax to stationary values described by the thermal ensemble, fixed
solely by the energy of the state. At the heart of understanding this
dichotomy is the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH): individual
eigenstates in nonintegrable systems are thermal, in the sense that
expectation values agree with the thermal prediction at a temperature
set by the energy of the eigenstate. In systems where ETH is violated,
thermalization can be avoided. Thus establishing the range of validity
of ETH is crucial in understanding whether a given quantum system
thermalizes. Here we study a simple model with confinement, the quantum
Ising chain with a longitudinal field, in which ETH is violated. Despite
an absence of integrability, there exist rare (nonthermal) states that
persist far into the spectrum. These arise as a direct consequence of
confinement: pairs of particles are confined, forming new `meson'
excitations whose energy can be extensive in the system size. We show
that such states are nonthermal in both the continuum and in the
low-energy spectrum of the corresponding lattice model. We highlight
that the presence of such states within the spectrum has important
consequences, with certain quenches leading to an absence of
thermalization and local observables evolving anomalously.
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| Document type | Working paper |
| Language | English |
| Related publication | Signatures of rare states and thermalization in a theory with confinement |
| Published at | https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.10782 |
| Downloads |
1808.10782
(Submitted manuscript)
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