Experimental extraction of the quantum effective action for a non-equilibrium many-body system
Maximilian Pr\"ufer, Torsten V. Zache, Philipp Kunkel, Stefan Lannig,, Alexis Bonnin, Helmut Strobel, J\"urgen Berges, Markus K. Oberthaler

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates an experimental method using analog quantum simulators to extract the quantum effective action of a non-equilibrium many-body system, revealing non-perturbative dynamics relevant to cosmology and condensed matter.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental approach to determine the non-equilibrium quantum effective action using analog quantum simulators, specifically applied to a spinor Bose gas.
Findings
Successfully inferred the quantum effective action up to fourth order.
Discovered suppression of the four-vertex at low momenta.
Observed non-perturbative behavior similar to early-universe cosmology.
Abstract
Far-from-equilibrium situations are ubiquitous in nature. They are responsible for a wealth of phenomena, which are not simple extensions of near-equilibrium properties, ranging from fluid flows turning turbulent to the highly organized forms of life. On the fundamental level, quantum fluctuations or entanglement lead to novel forms of complex dynamical behaviour in many-body systems for which a description as emergent phenomena can be found within the framework of quantum field theory. A central quantity in these efforts, containing all information about the measurable physical properties, is the quantum effective action. Though the problem of non-equilibrium quantum dynamics can be exactly formulated in terms of the quantum effective action, the solution is in general beyond capabilities of classical computers. In this work, we present a strategy to determine the non-equilibrium…
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