From Quantum Chaos and Eigenstate Thermalization to Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics
Luca D'Alessio, Yariv Kafri, Anatoli Polkovnikov, and Marcos Rigol

TL;DR
This review explores how quantum chaos and the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH) underpin statistical mechanics and thermodynamics, emphasizing their role in describing thermalization in isolated quantum systems and deriving fundamental thermodynamic relations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive pedagogical overview of ETH, linking quantum chaos, RMT, and thermodynamics, and discusses numerical evidence and implications for non-equilibrium dynamics.
Findings
ETH explains thermalization without external baths.
Quantum chaos enables derivation of thermodynamic relations for eigenstates.
Universal energy distributions can be obtained in driven quantum systems.
Abstract
This review gives a pedagogical introduction to the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH), its basis, and its implications to statistical mechanics and thermodynamics. In the first part, ETH is introduced as a natural extension of ideas from quantum chaos and random matrix theory (RMT). To this end, we present a brief overview of classical and quantum chaos, as well as RMT and some of its most important predictions. The latter include the statistics of energy levels, eigenstate components, and matrix elements of observables. Building on these, we introduce the ETH and show that it allows one to describe thermalization in isolated chaotic systems without invoking the notion of an external bath. We examine numerical evidence of eigenstate thermalization from studies of many-body lattice systems. We also introduce the concept of a quench as a means of taking isolated systems out of…
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