Ultrafast dynamics of cold Fermi gas after a local quench

Abstract

We consider non-equilibrium dynamics of two initially independent reservoirs AA and BB filled with a cold Fermi gas coupled and decoupled by two quantum quenches following one another. We find that the von Neumann entropy production induced by the quench is faster than thermal transport between the reservoirs and defines the short-time dynamics of the system. We analyze the energy change in the system which adds up the heat transferred between AA and BB and the work done by the quench to uncouple the reservoirs. In the case when AA and BB interact for a short time, we notice an energy increase in both reservoirs upon decoupling. This energy gain results from the quench's work and does not depend on the initial temperature imbalance between the reservoirs. We relate the quench's work to the mutual correlations of AA and BB expressed through their von Neumann entropies. Utilizing this relation, we show that once AA and BB become coupled, their entropies grow (on a timescale of the Fermi time) faster than the heat flow within the system. This result may provide a track of quantum correlations' generation at finite temperatures which one may probe in ultracold atoms, where we expect the characteristic timescale of correlations' growth to be ∼0.1ms\sim 0.1 {\rm ms}.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures (published version

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