IFEG   20353
INSTITUTO DE FISICA ENRIQUE GAVIOLA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Loschmidt echo in many-spin systems: a quest for intrinsic decoherence and emergent irreversibility
Autor/es:
HORACIO MIGUEL PASTAWSKI; PABLO RENÉ ZANGARA
Revista:
PHYSICA SCRIPTA - (Print)
Editorial:
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2017 vol. 92 p. 33001 - 33001
ISSN:
0031-8949
Resumen:
If a magnetic polarization excess is locally injected in a crystal of interacting spins in thermal equilibrium, this ´excitation´ would spread as consequence of spin?spin interactions. Such an apparently irreversible process is known as spin diffusion and it can lead the system back to ´equilibrium´. Even so, a unitary quantum dynamics would ensure a precise memory of the non-equilibrium initial condition. Then, if at a certain time, say $t/2$, an experimental protocol reverses the many-body dynamics by changing the sign of the effective Hamiltonian, it would drive the system back to the initial non-equilibrium state at time t. As a matter of fact, the reversal is always perturbed by small experimental imperfections and/or uncontrolled internal or environmental degrees of freedom. This limits the amount of signal M(t) recovered locally at time t. The degradation of M(t) accounts for these perturbations, which can also be seen as the sources of decoherence. This general idea defines the Loschmidt echo (LE), which embodies the various time-reversal procedures implemented in nuclear magnetic resonance. Here, we present an invitation to the study of the LE following the pathway induced by the experiments. With such a purpose, we provide a historical and conceptual overview that briefly revisits selected phenomena that underlie the LE dynamics including chaos, decoherence, localization and equilibration. This guiding thread ultimately leads us to the discussion of decoherence and irreversibility as an emergent phenomenon. In addition, we introduce the LE formalism by means of spin?spin correlation functions in a manner suitable for presentation in a broad scope physics journal. Last, but not least, we present new results that could trigger new experiments and theoretical ideas. In particular, we propose to transform an initially localized excitation into a more complex initial state, enabling a dynamically prepared LE. This induces a global definition of the LE in terms of the raw overlap between many-body wave functions. Our results show that as the complexity of the prepared state increases, it becomes more fragile towards small perturbations.