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A quantum Newton's cradle

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that a homogeneous 1D Bose gas with point-like collisional interactions is integrable, and that it is possible to construct a system with many degrees of freedom that does not reach thermal equilibrium even after thousands of collisions.
Abstract
It is a fundamental assumption of statistical mechanics that a closed system with many degrees of freedom ergodically samples all equal energy points in phase space. To understand the limits of this assumption, it is important to find and study systems that are not ergodic, and thus do not reach thermal equilibrium. A few complex systems have been proposed that are expected not to thermalize because their dynamics are integrable. Some nearly integrable systems of many particles have been studied numerically, and shown not to ergodically sample phase space. However, there has been no experimental demonstration of such a system with many degrees of freedom that does not approach thermal equilibrium. Here we report the preparation of out-of-equilibrium arrays of trapped one-dimensional (1D) Bose gases, each containing from 40 to 250 87Rb atoms, which do not noticeably equilibrate even after thousands of collisions. Our results are probably explainable by the well-known fact that a homogeneous 1D Bose gas with point-like collisional interactions is integrable. Until now, however, the time evolution of out-of-equilibrium 1D Bose gases has been a theoretically unsettled issue, as practical factors such as harmonic trapping and imperfectly point-like interactions may compromise integrability. The absence of damping in 1D Bose gases may lead to potential applications in force sensing and atom interferometry.

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Many-Body Physics with Ultracold Gases

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Thermalization and its mechanism for generic isolated quantum systems

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a generic isolated quantum many-body system does relax to a state well described by the standard statistical-mechanical prescription, and it is shown that time evolution itself plays a merely auxiliary role in relaxation, and that thermalization instead happens at the level of individual eigenstates, as first proposed by Deutsch and Srednicki.
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Colloquium: Nonequilibrium dynamics of closed interacting quantum systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give an overview of recent theoretical and experimental progress in the area of nonequilibrium dynamics of isolated quantum systems, particularly focusing on quantum quenches: the temporal evolution following a sudden or slow change of the coupling constants of the system Hamiltonian.
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Observation of many-body localization of interacting fermions in a quasirandom optical lattice

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Quantum many-body systems out of equilibrium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of the progress in probing dynamical equilibration and thermalization of closed quantum many-body systems driven out of equilibrium by quenches, ramps and periodic driving.
References
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Phase Transitions in Definite Total Spin States of Two-Component Fermi Gases

TL;DR: The present work shows that the symmetry reveals itself in spin-independent or coordinate-independent properties of these gases, namely as non-Abelian entropy in thermodynamic properties.
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Introduction to Quantum Many-Body Physics

TL;DR: In the introduction to Dirac's 1929 paper on many-electron systems (Dirac, Proc R Soc Lond Ser A, 123:714, 1929, [1]), Dirac envisioned that the two problems facing quantum mechanics were in connection with the exact fitting in of the theory with relativity ideas on the one hand and the fact that the exact application of these laws leads to equations much too complicated to be soluble on the other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quench Dynamics in Two-Dimensional Integrable SUSY Models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse quench processes in two dimensional quantum field theories with infinite number of conservation laws which also include fermionic charges that close a $N=1$ supersymmetric algebra.
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A systematic interpolatory method for an impurity in a one-dimensional fermionic background

TL;DR: Lindgren et al. as discussed by the authors explored a new numerical method for studying one-dimensional quantum systems in a trapping potential, where a single distinguishable particle interacts through a contact potential with a number of identical fermions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-thermalization in trapped atomic ion spin chains

TL;DR: This review highlights recent work using trapped ions to explore a variety of non-ergodic phenomena in long-range interacting spin models, effects that are heralded by the memory of out-of-equilibrium initial conditions.