Logo image
Quantum Joule expansion of one-dimensional systems
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Quantum Joule expansion of one-dimensional systems

Jin Zhang, Y. Meurice and S.-W. Tsai
Physical review. A, Vol.101(3), 033608
03/10/2020
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.101.033608
url
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.101.033608View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

We investigate the Joule expansion of nonintegrable quantum systems that contain bosons or spinless fermions in one-dimensional lattices. A barrier initially confines the particles to be in half of the system in a thermal state described by the canonical ensemble and is removed at time t=0. We investigate the properties of the time-evolved density matrix, the diagonal ensemble density matrix, and the corresponding canonical ensemble density matrix with an effective temperature determined by the total energy conservation using exact diagonalization. The weights for the diagonal ensemble and the canonical ensemble match well for high initial temperatures that correspond to negative effective final temperatures after the expansion. At long times after the barrier is removed, the time-evolved Rényi entropy of subsystems bigger than half can equilibrate to the thermal entropy with exponentially small fluctuations. The time-evolved reduced density matrix at long times can be approximated by a thermal density matrix for small subsystems. Few-body observables, like the momentum distribution function, can be approximated by a thermal expectation of the canonical ensemble with strongly suppressed fluctuations. The negative effective temperatures for finite systems go to non-negative temperatures in the thermodynamic limit for bosons, but there is a true thermodynamic effect for fermions, which is confirmed by finiteerature density matrix renormalization group calculations. We propose the Joule expansion as a way to dynamically create negative temperature states for fermion systems with repulsive interactions.

Details

Metrics

Logo image