Published March 19, 2025 | Version Published
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Theory of Metastable States in Many-Body Quantum Systems

  • 1. ROR icon University of Colorado Boulder
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

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 timescale 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 ๐‘‘-dimensional quantum models grows at least as fast as expโก(๐œ€^(−๐‘‘)), where ๐œ€ →0 is the relative energy density of the false vacuum; this lower bound matches, for the first time, explicit calculations using quantum field theory. We identify metastable states at finite energy density in the PXP model, along with exponentially many metastable states in “helical” spin chains and the two-dimensional Ising model. Our inherently quantum formalism reveals precise connections between many problems, including prethermalization, robust quantum scars, and quantum nucleation theory, and applies to systems without known semiclassical and/or field-theoretic limits.

Copyright and License

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.

Acknowledgement

We thank Alessio Lerose, Olexei Motrunich, Pablo Sala, and Dong Yuan for useful discussions. Tensor network calculations were performed using the TeNPy Library (version 1.0.0) [93]. This work was supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation under Grant No. FG-2020-13795 (A. L.), the Heising-Simons Foundation under Grant No. 2024-4848 (A. L.), and the Department of Energy under Quantum Pathfinder Grant No. DE-SC0024324 (C. Y. and A. L.). F. M. S. acknowledges support provided by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research (DE-SC0020290); DOE National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Quantum Systems Accelerator; and by Amazon Web Services, AWS Quantum Program. F. M. S. and A. L. also thank the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, which is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1748958, for hospitality as this work was initiated.

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Additional details

Related works

Is new version of
Discussion Paper: arXiv:2408.05261 (arXiv)
Is supplemented by
Software: https://github.com/tenpy/tenpy (URL)

Funding

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
FG-2020-13795
Heising-Simons Foundation
2024-4848
United States Department of Energy
DE-SC0024324
United States Department of Energy
DE-SC0020290
Quantum Systems Accelerator
Amazon (United States)
AWS Quantum Program
National Science Foundation
PHY-1748958

Dates

Accepted
2025-02-06

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy (PMA)
Publication Status
Published