Generalized Gibbs ensemble in integrable lattice models
Lev Vidmar, Marcos Rigol

TL;DR
This review explores the role of the generalized Gibbs ensemble (GGE) in describing equilibrium states of integrable quantum systems, highlighting its effectiveness and underlying mechanisms in both noninteracting and interacting models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of GGE and generalized thermalization, including original results on the transverse field Ising model and insights into eigenstate thermalization.
Findings
GGE accurately predicts spin-spin correlations in the transverse field Ising model
Generalized eigenstate thermalization occurs in both XX and Ising models
GGE explains equilibration without tracing out parts of the system
Abstract
The generalized Gibbs ensemble (GGE) was introduced ten years ago to describe observables in isolated integrable quantum systems after equilibration. Since then, the GGE has been demonstrated to be a powerful tool to predict the outcome of the relaxation dynamics of few-body observables in a variety of integrable models, a process we call generalized thermalization. This review discusses several fundamental aspects of the GGE and generalized thermalization in integrable systems. In particular, we focus on questions such as: which observables equilibrate to the GGE predictions and who should play the role of the bath; what conserved quantities can be used to construct the GGE; what are the differences between generalized thermalization in noninteracting systems and in interacting systems mappable to noninteracting ones; why is it that the GGE works when traditional ensembles of…
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