Abstract

We propose a self-validating scheme to calculate the unbiased responses of quantum many-body systems to external fields of arbitrary strength at any temperature. By switching on a specified field to a thermal pure quantum state of an isolated system, and tracking its time evolution, one can observe an intrinsic thermalization process driven solely by many-body effects. The transient behavior before thermalization contains rich information on excited states, giving the linear and nonlinear response functions at all frequencies. We uncover the necessary conditions to clarify the applicability of this formalism, supported by a proper definition of the nonlinear response function. The accuracy of the protocol is guaranteed by a rigorous upper bound of error exponentially decreasing with system size, and is well implemented in the simple ferromagnetic Heisenberg chain, whose response at high fields exhibits a nonlinear band deformation. We further extract the characteristic features of excitation of the spin-1/2 kagome antiferromagnet; the wave-number-insensitive linear responses from the possible spin liquid ground state, and the significantly broad nonlinear peaks which should be generated from numerous collisions of quasiparticles, that are beyond the perturbative description.

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