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A global quantum quench is the non-equilibrium dynamics initiated by a sudden change of a parameter in the Hamiltonian of an isolated quantum system, a protocol that is routinely engineered in cold-atom experiments3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11. According to a by now standard picture12, the initial state acts as a source of quasiparticle excitations. A quasiparticle of momentum p moves with velocity vp and carries quantum correlations through the systems. If there is a maximum speed of propagation vmaxvp (for example, as a consequence of the Lieb–Robinson bound13), all connected correlations at distance vanish for times t < /2vmax (ref. 12) and the entanglement entropy of an interval of length grows linearly in the same time window14.

How can confinement change qualitatively the spreading of correlations? Exactly as in the standard scenario, the initial state emits pairs of quasiparticles starting off in opposite directions. However, these are eventually turned back by the confining potential, leading to an oscillatory behaviour as shown in Fig. 1. In analogy to strong interaction, the bound states formed by this process are called mesons. Mesons produced after a quench typically move much slower than the elementary quasiparticles due to their larger mass.

Figure 1: Pictorial semiclassical picture of a meson state in the Ising model.
figure 1

Two counter-propagating domain walls bounce back and forth because of a confining interaction.

Confinement takes place in one of the paradigmatic models of statistical mechanics, the Ising chain in both transverse (hz) and longitudinal (hx) magnetic fields with Hamiltonian

where the coupling J sets the energy scale and σjα are the Pauli matrices. This model has been engineered with cold atoms15 and quench protocols have also been implemented9.

For hx = 0, the Hamiltonian (1) is diagonalized by a mapping to free fermions (see Supplementary Information). For hz < 1 the system is in the ferromagnetic phase where the massive fermions are freely propagating domain walls separating domains of opposite magnetization. Switching on a non-zero hx induces a linear potential between pairs of domain walls confining them into mesons16. In this Letter, we report numerical results for several observables showing that the non-equilibrium quench dynamics is drastically altered by confinement.

Expectation value of the order parameter

We first consider the time evolution of the magnetization 〈σx(t)〉 that in the integrable case (hx = 0) decays exponentially to zero17 (see Supplementary Information). For non-zero hx, we report the numerical data for 〈σx(t)〉 in Fig. 2 for two representative quenches. It is evident that even a small longitudinal field alters substantially the dynamics, turning the exponential relaxation into an oscillatory behaviour with numerous frequencies18. The power spectrum presented in Fig. 2 shows that the dominant frequencies are compatible, to a surprising high degree of accuracy, with the masses of the mesons and their differences.

Figure 2: Time evolution of the longitudinal magnetization.
figure 2

a,b, 〈σx (t)〉 after quenching from hz = 0.5, hx = 0 to hz = 0.25 and hx = 0.1, 0.2 (the result for hx = 0 is shown for comparison). Lines are iTEBD results; symbols are exact diagonalization results for L = 8, …, 12. Notice the weakness of finite-size effects: the iTEBD data for infinite chains are almost indistinguishable (up to a given time) from the exact diagonalization results. c,d, Power spectrum of the data in a and b. The vertical lines show the meson masses mi and their differences mij.

The two-point function shows the clearest signature of confinement manifested in a dramatically altered light-cone structure. In Fig. 3a we report the equal-time connected correlation function 〈σ1xσm+1xc for the quench from the fully ferromagnetic state to hz = 0.25 and varying hx from 0 to 0.4. If hx = 0, we recover the integrable dynamics with a clear light-cone spreading. For small hx = 0.025 the correlation follows qualitatively the integrable behaviour for short times, but then it drastically slows down and bounces back. Further increasing hx, the region with light-cone propagation shrinks to an almost invisible portion of the spacetime. This effect can be explained by considering that for a quench with hx = 0 the initial state can be written as17

in terms of the post-quench domain wall excitation ak. This formula quantifies the fact that the initial state can be written in terms of pairs of particles with opposite momenta and K(k) is the amplitude of production of these pairs (the exact dependence of K(k) on k is given in Supplementary Information, but this is inessential for the following). Adding a field hx confines the domain walls into mesons. When K(k) is small, the state is dominated by the linear terms that contain only (k, −k) domain walls pairs that get confined into mesons at rest. Quadratic terms (and higher order ones) lead to propagating mesons, but they are substantial only when K(k) is large enough. These have velocities that are significantly different from those of the domain walls (see Supplementary Information).

Figure 3: Connected longitudinal spin–spin correlation function 〈σ1xσm+1xc.
figure 3

a, Quench from hx = hz = 0 to the ferromagnetic phase with hz = 0.25 and with varying hx = 0, 0.025, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4. The light cone disappears already for very small interaction hx. b, The same as in a but on a different scale: the plotted signal is around 10−3 times the one in a and the orange regions represent out of range values of the correlation function. The dashed and solid lines correspond to the maximal velocity of the domain walls and of the lightest meson, respectively. c, Absolute value of the correlation function for a quench from the paramagnetic phase (hz = 2, hx = 0) to the ferromagnetic one (hz = 0.25, varying hx). d, Quench within the paramagnetic phase from hz = 2 and hx = 0 to hz = 1.75 and varying hx. While in the confining phase the light cone experiences a drastic non-perturbative change, in the paramagnetic phase it is only perturbatively modified.

For the quench in Fig. 3a, K(k) 1 for all momenta and practically only zero-momentum mesons are formed. Zooming in the ‘white’ region apparently without signal in Fig. 3a, traces of mesons with non-zero velocities should be visible. This is done in Fig. 3b where the same connected correlation is displayed on a different intensity scale. The signal in Fig. 3b is three orders of magnitude smaller than that in Fig. 3a and shows a feeble light cone characterized by a velocity different from that of the domain walls. The maximum meson velocity describes incredibly well the slope of the light cone for all values of hx.

As further supporting evidence for the above scenario, in Fig. 3c we report connected correlations for a large quench (with K(k) 1) from the paramagnetic phase to the ferromagnetic confining one. In this case, given that mesons with non-zero velocities are formed with high probability, the light cones are visible without zooming, and their slopes correspond to the maximal velocity of the mesons. A crucial consistency check of the validity of the overall scenario is that for quenches to the paramagnetic (non-confining) phase with hx ≠ 0 there is no radical change in the light cone as shown in Fig. 3d.

Similarly, the connected correlation function of the transverse component of the spin also reflects the change of the light cone due to the modified velocity of the mesons (see Supplementary Information). Furthermore, for quenches from and to several other values of the magnetic fields the overall picture is unchanged, so our conclusions are very general and not limited to the reported cases.

Entanglement entropy provides another smoking gun for the quasiparticle propagation and light-cone effects14. For zero hx, we observe in Fig. 4 a linear growth in time of the half-chain entanglement entropy in agreement with the known exact results19. By turning on the interaction hx, the growth of the entanglement entropy for quenches within the ferromagnetic phase is strongly slowed down and, after a transient, it appears to oscillate around a saturation value. The frequencies of these oscillations are in rough agreement with the meson masses and their differences as reported in Supplementary Information. This is a consequence of the fact that mesons are predominantly produced at rest and it is consistent with the strong suppression of the light cone of the two-point function. Actually, the small fraction of mesons with non-negligible velocities should produce a very slow increase of the entanglement that, however, is too small to be observed numerically. Conversely, for a quench across the critical point, the growth of the entanglement entropy is not negligible, but it is considerably reduced due to the production of many mesons with non-vanishing velocities. Overall, the data for the entanglement are compatible with the confinement scenario drawn for the correlations.

Figure 4: Time evolution of the half-chain entanglement entropy after a quench to the confining phase with hz = 0.25.
figure 4

a, Starting from the ferromagnetic phase (hz = hx = 0), the entanglement saturates also for small hx (greyscale in legend). b, Starting from the paramagnetic phase hz = 2, hx = 0, the growth of the entanglement entropy is considerably reduced, and for very large hx it also saturates.

Discussions

We have given compelling arguments and numerical evidence proving that confinement strongly affects the non-equilibrium dynamics following a quantum quench. The main effect is a dramatic change of the light-cone structure of correlation functions and entanglement entropy. At the same time, the one-point function oscillates in time with frequencies equal to the meson masses. These effects should be easily measurable in cold-atom experiments; corrections due to the trapping harmonic potential are expected to be as small as the finite-size effects we observed. We also showed that the quench dynamics provides direct access to the meson masses via the power spectrum of the one-point functions. This ‘quench spectroscopy’ could turn out to be more powerful than standard equilibrium methods to measure the spectrum.

To conclude, we speculate on a few other consequences and applications of our work. It was noticed some time ago20 that in some quenches within the Hamiltonian (1) the system does not approach asymptotically a thermal stationary state as expected from the non-integrability of the model. A possible explanation is that due to confinement there are rare states in the spectrum that prevent the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis21 from being applied. Along the same line of thought, even if these confined systems eventually thermalize, the standard prethermalization scenario22,23 for weak integrability breaking cannot be applied, since a small perturbation changes not only the long-time asymptotic expectation values, but completely alters the dynamics even at short timescales.

Finally, confinement is expected to have similar effects also in higher dimensions and so it is natural to wonder what the consequences are for realistic non-equilibrium situations in quantum chromodynamics such as the quark–gluon plasma in hadron colliders. While even approximate field-theoretical calculations for strong interactions are beyond our reach, holographic methods that have been successfully applied to the study of standard light-cone phenomena24 and to quenches in confining theories25 could be insightful to understand this fascinating problem.

Methods

The Hamiltonian (1) for hx ≠ 0 and hz ≠ 0 is not integrable and the spectrum can be described only by resorting to various approximations, such as, for example, field-theoretical ones26,27,28 that are valid in the vicinity of the critical point hz = 1 and hx = 0. Here we use a complementary approach: the low-density approximation of ref. 29, which describes the energy levels very accurately when the system is far away from the critical point. In the Supplementary Information we explain how this approach works and we report several pieces of evidence for its applicability for the values of magnetic fields of interest. This approximation allows us to calculate all the required properties of the mesons, namely their number, masses and velocities.

To simulate the time evolution after the quantum quench we use an iTEBD30 algorithm, details of which are reported in the Supplementary Information. Finally, the entanglement entropy is defined as the von Neumann entropy SA = −TrρA lnρA of the reduced density matrix ρA of a subsystem A.

Data availability.

The data that support the plots within this paper and other findings of this study are available from the authors on request.