248 research outputs found
On Form Factors in nested Bethe Ansatz systems
We investigate form factors of local operators in the multi-component Quantum
Non-linear Schr\"odinger model, a prototype theory solvable by the so-called
nested Bethe Ansatz. We determine the analytic properties of the infinite
volume form factors using the coordinate Bethe Ansatz solution and we establish
a connection with the finite volume matrix elements. In the two-component
models we derive a set of recursion relations for the "magnonic form factors",
which are the matrix elements on the nested Bethe Ansatz states. In certain
simple cases (involving states with only one spin-impurity) we obtain explicit
solutions for the recursion relations.Comment: 34 pages, v2 (minor modifications
Determining matrix elements and resonance widths from finite volume: the dangerous mu-terms
The standard numerical approach to determining matrix elements of local
operators and width of resonances uses the finite volume dependence of energy
levels and matrix elements. Finite size corrections that decay exponentially in
the volume are usually neglected or taken into account using perturbation
expansion in effective field theory. Using two-dimensional sine-Gordon field
theory as "toy model" it is shown that some exponential finite size effects
could be much larger than previously thought, potentially spoiling the
determination of matrix elements in frameworks such as lattice QCD. The
particular class of finite size corrections considered here are mu-terms
arising from bound state poles in the scattering amplitudes. In sine-Gordon
model, these can be explicitly evaluated and shown to explain the observed
discrepancies to high precision. It is argued that the effects observed are not
special to the two-dimensional setting, but rather depend on general field
theoretic features that are common with models relevant for particle physics.
It is important to understand these finite size corrections as they present a
potentially dangerous source of systematic errors for the determination of
matrix elements and resonance widths.Comment: 26 pages, 13 eps figures, LaTeX2e fil
Form factor expansion for thermal correlators
We consider finite temperature correlation functions in massive integrable
Quantum Field Theory. Using a regularization by putting the system in finite
volume, we develop a novel approach (based on multi-dimensional residues) to
the form factor expansion for thermal correlators. The first few terms are
obtained explicitly in theories with diagonal scattering. We also discuss the
validity of the LeClair-Mussardo proposal.Comment: 41 pages; v2: minor corrections, v3: minor correction
Highest coefficient of scalar products in SU(3)-invariant integrable models
We study SU(3)-invariant integrable models solvable by nested algebraic Bethe
ansatz. Scalar products of Bethe vectors in such models can be expressed in
terms of a bilinear combination of their highest coefficients. We obtain
various different representations for the highest coefficient in terms of sums
over partitions. We also obtain multiple integral representations for the
highest coefficient.Comment: 17 page
R\ue9nyi entropies of generic thermodynamic macrostates in integrable systems
We study the behaviour of R\ue9nyi entropies in a generic thermodynamic macrostate of an integrable model. In the standard quench action approach to quench dynamics, the R\ue9nyi entropies may be derived from the overlaps of the initial state with Bethe eigenstates. These overlaps fix the driving term in the thermodynamic Bethe ansatz (TBA) formalism. We show that this driving term can be also reconstructed starting from the macrostate's particle densities. We then compute explicitly the stationary R\ue9nyi entropies after the quench from the dimer and the tilted N\ue9el state in XXZ spin chains. For the former state we employ the overlap TBA approach, while for the latter we reconstruct the driving terms from the macrostate. We discuss in full detail the limits that can be analytically handled and we use numerical simulations to check our results against the large time limit of the entanglement entropies
Quantum Quench in the Transverse Field Ising chain I: Time evolution of order parameter correlators
We consider the time evolution of order parameter correlation functions after
a sudden quantum quench of the magnetic field in the transverse field Ising
chain. Using two novel methods based on determinants and form factor sums
respectively, we derive analytic expressions for the asymptotic behaviour of
one and two point correlators. We discuss quenches within the ordered and
disordered phases as well as quenches between the phases and to the quantum
critical point. We give detailed account of both methods.Comment: 65 pages, 21 figures, some typos correcte
Non-equilibrium dynamics of the Tavis-Cummings model
In quantum many-body theory no generic microscopic principle at the origin of
complex dynamics is known. Quite opposed, in classical mechanics the theory of
non-linear dynamics provides a detailed framework for the distinction between
near-integrable and chaotic systems. Here we propose to describe the
off-equilibrium dynamics of the Tavis-Cummings model by an underlying classical
Hamiltonian system, which can be analyzed using the powerful tools of classical
theory of motion. We show that scattering in the classical phase space can
drive the quantum model close to thermal equilibrium. Interestingly, this
happens in the fully quantum regime, where physical observables do not show any
dynamic chaotic behavior.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Universal corrections to entanglement entropy of local quantum quenches
We study the time evolution of single interval Renyi and entanglement entropies following local quantum quenches in two dimensional conformal field theories at finite temperature for which the locally excited states have a finite temporal width, \epsilon. We show that, for local quenches produced by the action of a conformal primary field, the time dependence of Renyi and entanglement entropies at order \epsilon^2 is universal. It is determined by the expectation value of the stress tensor in the replica geometry and proportional to the conformal dimension of the primary field generating the local excitation. We also show that in CFTs with a gravity dual, the \epsilon^2 correction to the holographic entanglement entropy following a local quench precisely agrees with the CFT prediction. We then consider CFTs admitting a higher spin symmetry and turn on a higher spin chemical potential \mu. We calculate the time dependence of the order \epsilon^2 correction to the entanglement entropy for small \mu, and show that the contribution at order \mu^2 is universal. We verify our arguments against exact results for minimal models and the free fermion theory
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