Yulia E. Shchadilova, Pedro Ribeiro, Masudul Haque
We present results on quantum quenches in systems with a fixed number of particles in a large region. We show that the typical differences between local and global quenches present in systems with regular thermodynamic limit are lacking in this low-density limit. In particular, we show that in this limit local quenches may not lead to equilibration to the new ground state, and that global quenches can have power-law work distributions ("edge singularities") typically associated with local quenches for finite-density systems. We also show that this regime allows for large edge singularity exponents beyond that allowed by the constraints of the usual thermodynamic limit. This large-exponent singularity has observable consequences in the time evolution, leading to a distinct intermediate power-law regime in time. We demonstrate these results first using local quantum quenches in a low-density Kondo-like system, and additionally through global and local quenches in Bose-Hubbard, Aubry-Andre, and hard-core boson systems in the low-density regime.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1303.4103
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