Taking the temperature of a pure quantum state

ORAL

Abstract

Temperature is a deceptively simple concept that still raises deep questions at the forefront of quantum physics research. The observation of thermalisation in completely isolated quantum systems, such as cold-atom quantum simulators, implies that a temperature can be assigned even to individual, pure quantum states. Here, we propose a scheme to measure the temperature of such pure states through quantum interference. Our proposal involves interferometry of an auxiliary qubit probe, which is prepared in a superposition state and subsequently undergoes decoherence due to weak coupling with a closed, thermalised many-body system. Using only a few basic assumptions about chaotic quantum systems — namely, the eigenstate thermalisation hypothesis and the emergence of hydrodynamics at long times — we show that the qubit undergoes pure exponential decoherence at a rate that depends on the temperature of its surroundings. We verify our predictions by numerical experiments on a quantum spin chain that thermalises after absorbing energy from a periodic drive. Our work provides a general method to measure the temperature of isolated, strongly interacting systems under minimal assumptions.

*This work was supported by the Royal Society, the European Research Council (Starting Grant ODYSSEY: Grant Agreement No. 758403; Marie Skłodowska-Curie Action: Grant Agreement No. 890884), and the EPSRC-SFI joint project QuamNESS.

Publication: M. T. Mitchison, T. Fogarty, G. Guarnieri, S. Campbell, T. Busch & J. Goold, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 080402 (2020)
M. T. Mitchison, A. Purkayastha, M. Brenes, A. Silva & J. Goold, arXiv:2103.16601 [quant-ph]

Presenters

  • Mark T Mitchison

    • Trinity College Dublin

Authors

  • Mark T Mitchison

    • Trinity College Dublin
  • Archak Purkayastha

    • Trinity College Dublin
  • Marlon Brenes

    • Trinity College Dublin
  • Alessandro Silva

    • SISSA
  • John Goold

    • Trinity College Dublin
    • Trinity College Dublin, Ireland