English

Eigenstate thermalization hypothesis and its deviations from random-matrix theory beyond the thermalization time

Statistical Mechanics 2022-05-11 v3 Strongly Correlated Electrons High Energy Physics - Theory Quantum Physics

Abstract

The Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis (ETH) explains emergence of the thermodynamic equilibrium by assuming a particular structure of observable's matrix elements in the energy eigenbasis. Schematically, it postulates that off-diagonal matrix elements are random numbers and the observables can be described by Random Matrix Theory (RMT). To what extent physical operators can be described by RMT, more precisely at which energy scale strict RMT description applies, is however not fully understood. We study this issue by introducing a novel numerical approach to probe correlations between matrix elements for Hilbert-space dimensions beyond those accessible for exact diagonalization. Our analysis is based on the evaluation of higher moments of operator submatrices, defined within energy windows of varying width. Considering nonintegrable quantum spin chains, we observe that genuine RMT behavior is absent even for narrow energy windows corresponding to time scales of the order of thermalization time τth\tau_\text{th} of the respective observables. We also demonstrate that residual correlations between matrix elements are reflected in the dynamics of out-of-time-ordered correlation functions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2110.04085,
  title  = {Eigenstate thermalization hypothesis and its deviations from random-matrix theory beyond the thermalization time},
  author = {Jiaozi Wang and Mats H. Lamann and Jonas Richter and Robin Steinigeweg and Anatoly Dymarsky and Jochen Gemmer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2110.04085},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

15 pages, 16 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T06:44:12.530Z