Rapid Thermalization of Dissipative Many-Body Dynamics of Commuting Hamiltonians
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Quantum systems typically reach thermal equilibrium rather quickly when coupled to a thermal environment. The usual way of bounding the speed of this process is by estimating the spectral gap of the dissipative generator. However the gap, by itself, does not always yield a reasonable estimate for the thermalization time in many-body systems: without further structure, a uniform lower bound on it only constrains the thermalization time to grow polynomially with system size. Here, instead, we show that for a large class of geometrically-2-local models of Davies generators with commuting Hamiltonians, the thermalization time is much shorter than one would naïvely estimate from the gap: at most logarithmic in the system size. This yields the so-called rapid mixing of dissipative dynamics. The result is particularly relevant for 1D systems, for which we prove rapid thermalization with a system size independent decay rate only from a positive gap in the generator. We also prove that systems in hypercubic lattices of any dimension, and exponential graphs, such as trees, have rapid mixing at high enough temperatures. We do this by introducing a novel notion of clustering which we call “strong local indistinguishability” based on a max-relative entropy, and then proving that it implies a lower bound on the modified logarithmic Sobolev inequality (MLSI) for nearest neighbour commuting models. This has consequences for the rate of thermalization towards Gibbs states, and also for their relevant Wasserstein distances and transportation cost inequalities. Along the way, we show that several measures of decay of correlations on Gibbs states of commuting Hamiltonians are equivalent, a result of independent interest. At the technical level, we also show a direct relation between properties of Davies and Schmidt dynamics, that allows to transfer results of thermalization between both.
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Acknowledgements: A.C. acknowledges the support of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) - Project-ID 470903074 - TRR 352. A.M.A. acknowledges support from the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion through the grants “IFT Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa CEX2020-001007-S" and “Ramón y Cajal RyC2021-031610-I”, financed by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and the European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR. This project was funded within the QuantERA II Programme that has received funding from the EU’s H2020 research and innovation programme under the GA No 101017733.
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1432-0916
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Agencia Estatal de Investigación (IFT Centro de Ex- celencia Severo Ochoa CEX2020-001007-S, Ram ón y Cajal RyC2021-031610-I)
Horizon 2020 (GA No 101017733)

