Abstract
A major open question in studies of nonequilibrium quantum dynamics is the identification of the time scales involved in the relaxation process of isolated quantum systems that have many interacting particles. We demonstrate that long time scales can be analytically found by analyzing dynamical manifestations of spectral correlations. Using this approach, we show that the Thouless time, $t_{\text{Th}}$, and the relaxation time, $t_{\text{R}}$, increase exponentially with system size. We define $t_{\text{Th}}$ as the time at which the spread of the initial state in the many-body Hilbert space is complete and verify that it agrees with the inverse of the Thouless energy. $t_{\text{Th}}$ marks the point beyond which the dynamics acquire universal features, while relaxation happens later when the evolution reaches a stationary state. In chaotic systems, $t_{\text{Th}}\ll t_{\text{R}}$, while for systems approaching a many-body localized phase, $t_{\text{Th}}\rightarrow t_{\text{R}}$. Our analytical results for $t_{\text{Th}}$ and $t_{\text{R}}$ are obtained for the survival probability, which is a global quantity. We show numerically that the same time scales appear also in the evolution of the spin autocorrelation function, which is an experimental local observable. Our studies are carried out for realistic many-body quantum models. The results are compared with those for random matrices.
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