Abstract

We propose a route towards engineering non-thermal states of matter, which show largely unexplored physics. The main idea relies on the adiabatic passage of a thermal ensemble under slow variations of the system Hamiltonian. If the temperature of the initial thermal ensemble is either zero or infinite the ensemble after the passage is a simple thermal one with the same vanishing or infinite temperature. However, for any finite non-zero temperature intriguing non-thermal ensembles can be achieved. We exemplify this in: (a) a single oscillator (b) a dimerized interacting one dimensional chain of spinless fermions, (c) a BCS-type superconductor and (d) the topological Kitaev chain. We solve these models with a combination of methods; either exactly, numerically using the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) or within an approximate functional renormalization group (FRG) scheme. The designed states show strongly non-thermal behavior in each of the considered models. For example, for the chain of spinless fermions we exemplify how long ranged non-thermal power-law correlations can be stabilized and for the Kitaev chain we elucidate how the non-thermal ensemble can largely alter the transition temperature separating topological and trivial phases.

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