Abstract
Although statistical mechanics describes thermal equilibrium states, these states may ormay not emerge dynamically for a subsystem of an isolated quantum many-body system. For instance, quantum systems that are near-integrable usually fail to thermalize in an experimentally realistic time scale, and instead relax to quasi-stationary prethermal states that can be described by statistical mechanics, when approximately conserved quantities are included in a generalized Gibbs ensemble (GGE).Weexperimentally study the relaxation dynamics of a chain of up to 22 spins evolving under a long-range transverse-field Ising Hamiltonian following a sudden quench. For sufficiently long-range interactions, the system relaxes to a new type of prethermal state that retains a strong memory of the initial conditions. However, the prethermal state in this case cannot be described by a standard GGE; it rather arises from an emergent double-well potential felt by the spin excitations. This result shows that prethermalization occurs in a broader context than previously thought, and reveals new challenges for a generic understanding of the thermalization of quantum systems, particularly in the presence of long-range interactions.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Neyenhuis, B., Zhang, J., Hess, P. W., Smith, J., Lee, A. C., Richerme, P., … Monroe, C. (2017). Observation of prethermalization in long-range interacting spin chains. Science Advances, 3(8). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1700672
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.