Non-equilibrium Dynamics of Disordered Quantum Many-Body Systems
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Abstract
Recent advances in theoretical physics have increasingly focused on the dynamics of quantum systems with many interacting degrees of freedom, while ultracold atom platforms now enable the realization of diverse theoretical models with precise control over system parameters and advanced monitoring techniques. A prominent example is cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED), where large atomic or molecular ensembles are coupled to high-finesse optical cavities, enabling strong interaction with confined electromagnetic modes and leading to phenomena such as the superradiant phase transition, in which atoms and photons form a coherent state. Most theoretical studies of CQED have concentrated on regimes of spatially uniform atom–cavity coupling, where collective behavior allows a description in terms of the classical dynamics of a few macroscopic variables. However, experimental capabilities now permit exploration beyond this limit, though theoretical progress is hindered by the exponential computational complexity of simulating large quantum systems, particularly when environmental coupling is included. This thesis addresses such challenges by developing efficient approaches, within the Keldysh formalism of non-equilibrium quantum field theory, to study systems with strongly disordered interactions coupled to external reservoirs. Two representative models are considered: a disordered spin–boson model describing light–matter interactions with quenched disorder, relevant to recent CQED experiments in confocal cavities, and a fermion–phonon system governed by the Yukawa–Sachdev–Ye–Kitaev (Yukawa-SYK) model. Both systems are quantum critical, exhibiting a continuum of low-energy modes above their stationary states, yet disorder produces qualitatively distinct dynamical behaviors: in the spin–boson system it induces slow, glassy relaxation, whereas in the Yukawa-SYK model it leads to rapid thermalization. These contrasting outcomes reveal the non-trivial role of disorder in quantum many-body systems and motivate further investigation into its effects on non-equilibrium quantum dynamics.
