Real-time evolution for weak interaction quenches in quantum systems
Michael Moeckel, Stefan Kehrein

TL;DR
This paper investigates the real-time dynamics of a Fermi liquid after a weak interaction quench, revealing a quasiparticle description, a new nonequilibrium state, and delayed thermalization, with broad implications for quantum many-body systems.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic expansion method to analyze nonequilibrium Fermi liquids post-quench, demonstrating a new quasi-stationary state and delayed relaxation phenomena.
Findings
Existence of a quasiparticle description in nonequilibrium
Observation of a new nonequilibrium Fermi liquid-like state
Delayed thermalization due to phase space constraints
Abstract
Motivated by recent experiments in ultracold atomic gases that explore the nonequilibrium dynamics of interacting quantum many-body systems, we investigate the nonequilibrium properties of a Fermi liquid. We apply an interaction quench within the Fermi liquid phase of the Hubbard model by switching on a weak interaction suddenly; then we follow the real-time dynamics of the momentum distribution by a systematic expansion in the interaction strength based on the flow equation method. In this paper we derive our main results, namely the applicability of a quasiparticle description, the observation of a new type of quasi-stationary nonequilibrium Fermi liquid like state and a delayed thermalization of the momentum distribution. We explain the physical origin of the delayed relaxation as a consequence of phase space constraints in fermionic many-body systems. This brings about a close…
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