Thermalization and its mechanism for generic isolated quantum systems
Marcos Rigol, Vanja Dunjko, Maxim Olshanii

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that generic isolated quantum systems thermalize through eigenstate thermalization, where individual eigenstates encode thermal properties, resolving longstanding questions about quantum thermalization mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides evidence that thermalization occurs at the eigenstate level in generic quantum systems, supporting the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis.
Findings
Eigenstates within the microcanonical window yield consistent thermal averages
Time evolution is auxiliary; thermalization occurs at the eigenstate level
Supports the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis as a mechanism for quantum thermalization
Abstract
Time dynamics of isolated many-body quantum systems has long been an elusive subject. Very recently, however, meaningful experimental studies of the problem have finally become possible, stimulating theoretical interest as well. Progress in this field is perhaps most urgently needed in the foundations of quantum statistical mechanics. This is so because in generic isolated systems, one expects nonequilibrium dynamics on its own to result in thermalization: a relaxation to states where the values of macroscopic quantities are stationary, universal with respect to widely differing initial conditions, and predictable through the time-tested recipe of statistical mechanics. However, it is not obvious what feature of many-body quantum mechanics makes quantum thermalization possible, in a sense analogous to that in which dynamical chaos makes classical thermalization possible. For example,…
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