Theory of metastable states in many-body quantum systems
Chao Yin, Federica M. Surace, Andrew Lucas

TL;DR
This paper develops a rigorous mathematical framework for understanding metastable states in many-body quantum systems, linking their properties to eigenstates, prethermalization, and quantum field theory predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a formal theory of metastable states, proving their connection to eigenstates and analyzing their lifetimes, with applications to various quantum models and phenomena.
Findings
Metastable states are eigenstates of perturbed Hamiltonians.
Prethermal behavior persists for long times in metastable states.
Lower bounds on false vacuum lifetimes match quantum field theory calculations.
Abstract
We present a mathematical theory of metastable pure states in closed many-body quantum systems with finite-dimensional Hilbert space. Given a Hamiltonian, a pure state is defined to be metastable when all sufficiently local operators either stabilize the state, or raise its average energy. We prove that short-range entangled metastable states are necessarily eigenstates (scars) of a perturbatively close Hamiltonian. Given any metastable eigenstate of a Hamiltonian, in the presence of perturbations, we prove the presence of prethermal behavior: local correlation functions decay at a rate bounded by a time scale nonperturbatively long in the inverse metastability radius, rather than Fermi's Golden Rule. Inspired by this general theory, we prove that the lifetime of the false vacuum in certain -dimensional quantum models grows at least as fast as , where…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
