English

Prethermalization without temperature

Disordered Systems and Neural Networks 2020-11-10 v2 Quantum Physics

Abstract

While a clean driven system generically absorbs energy until it reaches `infinite temperature', it may do so very slowly exhibiting what is known as a prethermal regime. Here, we show that the emergence of an additional approximately conserved quantity in a periodically driven (Floquet) system can give rise to an analogous long-lived regime. This can allow for non-trivial dynamics, even from initial states that are at a high or infinite temperature with respect to an effective Hamiltonian governing the prethermal dynamics. We present concrete settings with such a prethermal regime, one with a period-doubled (time-crystalline) response. We also present a direct diagnostic to distinguish this prethermal phenomenon from its infinitely long-lived many-body localised cousin. We apply these insights to a model of the recent NMR experiments by Rovny et al., [Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 180603 (2018)] which, intriguingly, detected signatures of a Floquet time crystal in a clean three-dimensional material. We show that a mild but subtle variation of their driving protocol can increase the lifetime of the time-crystalline signal by orders of magnitude.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.10371,
  title  = {Prethermalization without temperature},
  author = {David J. Luitz and Roderich Moessner and S. L. Sondhi and Vedika Khemani},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.10371},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

v2- published version; discussions expanded and clarified

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:58:17.752Z