Abstract

At thermal equilibrium, the concept of effective central charge for massive deformations of two-dimensional conformal field theories (CFT) is well understood, and can be defined by comparing the partition function of the massive model to that of a CFT. This temperature-dependent effective charge interpolates monotonically between the central charge values corresponding to the IR and UV fixed points at low and high temperatures, respectively. We propose a non-equilibrium, time-dependent generalization of the effective central charge for integrable models after a quantum quench, c_{\rm eff}(t), obtained by comparing the return amplitude to that of a CFT quench. We study this proposal for a large mass quench of a free boson, where the effective charge is seen to interpolate between c_{\rm eff}=0 at t=0t=0, and c_{\rm eff}\sim 1 at t\to\inftyt→∞, as is expected. We use our effective charge to define an “Ising to Tricritical Ising" quench protocol, where the charge evolves from c_{\rm eff}=1/2 at t=0t=0, to c_{\rm eff}=7/10 at t\to\inftyt→∞, the corresponding values of the first two unitary minimal CFT models. We then argue that the inverse “Tricritical Ising to Ising" quench is impossible with our methods. These conclusions can be generalized for quenches between any two adjacent unitary minimal CFT models. We finally study a large mass quench into the “staircase model" (sinh-Gordon with a particular complex coupling). At short times after the quench, the effective central charge increases in a discrete “staircase" structure, where the values of the charge at the steps can be computed in terms of the central charges of unitary minimal CFT models. When the initial state is a pure state, one always finds that c_{\rm eff}(t\to\infty)\geq c_{\rm eff}(t=0), though c_{\rm eff}(t), generally oscillates at finite times. We explore how this constraint may be related to RG flow irreversibility.

Highlights

  • We find that the non-equilibrium effective central charge evolves at very short times with a “staircase" structure, where it increases in discrete steps, whose values are determined in terms of the central charges of minimal models

  • We have proposed a definition for a time-dependent effective central charge that describes a massive field theory after a quantum quench

  • Quantum quenches from a pure initial state introduce an extensive amount of energy into the system, such that at long times the state can be described by some finite effective temperature(s)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Renormalization group (RG) transformations in quantum field theory are irreversible, as information about high-energy degrees of freedom is lost. This definition is analogous to how the effective central charge at thermal equilibrium is defined, by comparing the partition function of the model to that of a CFT. From such exact solutions, we can verify that our proposal for effective central charge seems to satisfy the expected properties, of interpolating between the central charges describing the initial and final states, for large quenches, where the final central charge is the known thermal value. The effective central charge generally oscillates at finite times, so the increase is not monotonic, this makes it difficult to find a direct RG flow interpretation for the meaning of the effective charge at finite times

Effective central charge for integrable models at thermal equilibrium
Quantum quenches and the return amplitude
Return amplitude in IFT quenches
Mass quench of a free boson
Effective quench from Ising to tricritical Ising CFT
Quench into the staircase model
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call