Emergent Prethermalization Signatures in Out-of-Time Ordered Correlations

How a many-body quantum system thermalizes—or fails to do so—under its own interaction is a fundamental yet elusive concept. Here we demonstrate nuclear magnetic resonance observation of the emergence of prethermalization by measuring out-of-time ordered correlations. We exploit Hamiltonian engineer...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wei, Ken Xuan, Peng, Pai, Shtanko, Oles, Marvian, Iman, Lloyd, Seth, Ramanathan, Chandrasekhar, Cappellaro, Paola
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/136934
Description
Summary:How a many-body quantum system thermalizes—or fails to do so—under its own interaction is a fundamental yet elusive concept. Here we demonstrate nuclear magnetic resonance observation of the emergence of prethermalization by measuring out-of-time ordered correlations. We exploit Hamiltonian engineering techniques to tune the strength of spin-spin interactions and of a transverse magnetic field in a spin chain system, as well as to invert the Hamiltonian sign to reveal out-of-time ordered correlations. At large fields, we observe an emergent conserved quantity due to prethermalization, which can be revealed by an early saturation of correlations. Our experiment not only demonstrates a new protocol to measure out-of-time ordered correlations, but also provides new insights in the study of quantum thermodynamics.