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. 2022 Jun 28;11:194. doi: 10.1038/s41377-022-00887-5

Experimental verification of generalized eigenstate thermalization hypothesis in an integrable system

Qin-Qin Wang 1,2,3,#, Si-Jing Tao 1,2,3,#, Wei-Wei Pan 1,2,3, Zhe Chen 1,2,3, Geng Chen 1,2,3, Kai Sun 1,2,3, Jin-Shi Xu 1,2,3, Xiao-Ye Xu 1,2,3,, Yong-Jian Han 1,2,3,, Chuan-Feng Li 1,2,3,, Guang-Can Guo 1,2,3
PMCID: PMC9239999  PMID: 35764622

Abstract

Identifying the general mechanics behind the equilibration of a complex isolated quantum system towards a state described by only a few parameters has been the focus of attention in non-equilibrium thermodynamics. And several experimentally unproven conjectures are proposed for the statistical description of quantum (non-)integrable models. The plausible eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH), which suggests that each energy eigenstate itself is thermal, plays a crucial role in understanding the quantum thermalization in non-integrable systems; it is commonly believed that it does not exist in integrable systems. Nevertheless, integrable systems can still relax to the generalized Gibbs ensemble. From a microscopic perspective, understanding the origin of this generalized thermalization that occurs in an isolated integrable system is a fundamental open question lacking experimental investigations. Herein, we experimentally investigated the spin subsystem relaxation in an isolated spin–orbit coupling quantum system. By applying the quantum state engineering technique, we initialized the system with various distribution widths in the mutual eigenbasis of the conserved quantities. Then, we compared the steady state of the spin subsystem reached in a long-time coherent dynamics to the prediction of a generalized version of ETH and the underlying mechanism of the generalized thermalization is experimentally verified for the first time. Our results facilitate understanding the origin of quantum statistical mechanics.

Subject terms: Quantum optics, Single photons and quantum effects

Introduction

Statistical mechanics predicts that an isolated classical system relaxes to a thermal state which is determined only by its energy and independent of the other details of its initial conditions13. This “universality” of thermalization has been well-understood by utilizing ergodicity in classical theories (Fig. 1a). Unfortunately, due to the general absence of ergodicity in quantum systems, this successful theoretical framework cannot be directly applied to the quantum scenarios4,5. Therefore, the origin of thermalization in an isolated quantum system must fundamentally differ from that of its classical counterpart.

Fig. 1. Mechanism of the thermalization and the generalized thermalization.

Fig. 1

An illustration of the following three points: a the ergodicity in classical systems, b the ETH supporting the thermalization in non-integrable quantum systems6, and c the GETH supporting the generalized thermalization in integrable quantum systems

For an isolated quantum system, its thermalization is usually revealed by the long-time average of the observables of interest, which can also be directly calculated from an ensemble of its energy eigenstates6. Further, since the expectation of the observables in a thermal state can be obtained by averaging on a uniformly distributed micro-canonical ensemble (ME), which is constructed within the constant-energy manifold and independent of the initial details, this alleged “diagonal ensemble”, which depends on the details of the initial energy distributions, is explicitly conflicted. To explain the elimination of the initial information in the thermalization process of an isolated quantum system, some new insights into the quantum theory are needed. Actually, understanding the origin of the “universality” of the equilibrium states in isolated quantum systems has become one of the central problems in the subject of quantum non-equilibrium physics7.

Among the numerous efforts, the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH)6,8,9, which states that thermalization occurs at the level of a single energy eigenstate of a given Hamiltonian (Fig. 1b), plays a key role in explaining the quantum thermalization. More concretely, based on ETH, if the expectation of a local observable in the energy eigenstates continuously changes along with the energy, its long-time average for any superposition state of the eigenstates with similar energy is independent of the details of the initial states, and this can be efficiently calculated by averaging in the corresponding ME. It is generally believed that generic quantum many-body systems, except some special ones with many-body localization10,11, should satisfy the ETH and can be thermalized6,1221.

However, extensively theoretical investigations, ranging from one-dimensional hard-core bosons to transverse-field Ising chain2227, have confirmed that the celebrated ETH is broken down in such integrable quantum systems, which have a non-trivial set of conserved quantities and cannot consequently thermalize. Nevertheless, the integrable systems can still relax to the maximum entropy state with given constants of motion, which is generally called the generalized Gibbs ensemble (GGE)22, and exhibit the generalized thermalization27,28. Admittedly, the GGE is not a thermal state and consequently cannot be directly understood using the ETH. However, its underlying mechanism has been found to be explicable by employing the generalized version of ETH (GETH)28, in which the conventional energy eigenstates are upgraded to the mutual ones of the Hamiltonian and a set of conserved quantities of the quantum system (Fig. 1c). Although significant developments have been achieved by applying quantum simulation2937, even the GGE has been observed in a degenerate one-dimensional Bose gas38. The GETH, previously introduced to explain the generalized thermalization of integrable models, still lacks a direct experimental verification because of the challenges in generating the given superposition states of the system’s mutual eigenstates39 and requiring long-time coherent dynamics.

In this study, in an integrable quantum system with spin–orbit coupling, we experimentally verified the GETH from the spin relaxation by applying an asymptotic method. The experiment was carried out in our large-scale photonic discrete-time quantum walk (QW)40. The system can be well-isolated and consequently can maintain a long-time coherent evolution41,42 to explore the pure state quantum statistical mechanics43. More importantly, as the key techniques for investigating the GETH, both the ability to engineer the initial states44,45 and the full reconstruction of the spinor eigenvectors of a given Hamiltonian40 are accessible in our framework. Benefiting from these unique techniques, we monitored the spin subsystem relaxation after preparing the whole system with different distribution widths on the mutual eigenstate basis of the conserved quantities. Our experimental results demonstrated that the long-time-averaged spin state from the superposition of the mutual eigenstates with the similar conserved quantities can be predicted by the generalized ME, and explicitly support the GETH in the integrable systems.

Theoretical background

The model of QW

Herein, we consider a discrete-time version of QW4648 that describes the coherent hopping of a single microscopic particle on a discrete infinite lattice, where a quantum coin determines the transition amplitudes. Consequently, the system contains two interacted subsystems: the coin (spin) and lattice, as shown in Fig. 2a. We take the lattice as bath B and the spin as the subsystem of interest S (i.e., the local observables of interest are on the spin), whose relaxation is investigated to reveal the equilibration and generalized thermalization.

Fig. 2. Quantum walk model and the experimental setup.

Fig. 2

a A diagram of an isolated QW for investigating the generalized thermalization, which contains two parts: the discrete infinite lattice B and spin (coin) subsystem S, coupled by the spin–orbit interaction. b The experimental realization of QW involves the following four modules. (1) Pairs of photons are generated via the spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in the BBO2 crystal, where a photon from each pair is directly detected by the APD1 as a trigger and the other signal one as the walker is sent to the subsequent module. (2) First, a localized state is initialized via a PBS-HWP-QWP setting. Second, the signal photons go through at most six steps of walk with each step involving two SU(2) coin tossings achieved by the combination QWP-HWP-QWP and two shift operators achieved by the calcite crystals. An arbitrary Gaussian wavepacket over the lattice space can be obtained after projecting the coin on an unbiased basis + using an HWP and PBS. (3) After re-initialization of the coin state (here the time step is also re-initialized as t = 0) and sending the signal photons into a 10-step walk whose coin-tossing rotations along the y-axis and achieved by utilizing the HWP, the relaxation evolution of the coin state can be monitored through a coin analyzer. (4) The time-evolving probability distributions, i.e., the pulse train of signal photons with a time interval of approximately 5 ps, can be analyzed by utilizing the up-converted detector, which comprised a frequency upconversion in the BBO3 crystal, a 4-f system for filtering the spectrum, and a PMT detector. The 4-f system includes a prism for introducing dispersion, a knife-edge for blocking the noise photons whose wavelength is longer than 395 nm, and a mirror reflecting the up-converted signal photons to the PMT. List of the abbreviations: lens (L); β-BaB2O4 (BBO); avalanche photodiode detector (APD); dichroic mirror (DM); polarization-dependent beam splitter (PBS); half-wave plate (HWP); quarter-wave plate (QWP); photomultiplier tube (PMT). Detailed descriptions are provided in the Methods

The dynamics of the whole system can be described as a stroboscopic operation Ut with U representing a single step of walk and the time tZ being in a discrete scenario. Effectively, the unitary time evolution can be expressed as eiHefft in terms of an effective Hamiltonian Heff. For a split-step version49, the effective Hamiltonian reads (see Methods): Heffθ1,θ2=ππdkEknHkσkk, where θ1 and θ2 are the control parameters of the coin-tossing operators, E(k) gives the (quasi-)energy band with nHk denoting the corresponding spinor eigenvector for the (quasi-)momentum k, and σ=σx,σy,σz is the Pauli matrix. The interchange of energy between subsystem S and bath B is implemented via the spin–orbit coupling. This typical integrable model has been extensively applied to investigate the general properties of the spin-orbital coupling system, especially its topological characters50. Herein, we explore the GETH and generalized thermalization in this model.

Equilibration of the spin subsystem

As shown in Supplementary Section A, the long-time-averaged state of the spin subsystem in the QW can always relax to a steady state51,52: ρst=kπ,π12I+PkninHnHσ, where I is the 2 × 2 identity matrix, Pk represents the initial probability distribution in momentum space, and ni denotes the initial Bloch vector. Moreover, the steady state can be obtained by tracing out bath B from the “diagonal ensemble”6 or be directly calculated by averaging the long-time dynamics of the spin subsystem43 (for details, see Supplementary Section A). Since the spin subsystem reaches a steady state, all the local observables on the spin are obviously equilibrated. Generally, the steady state ρst explicitly depends on Pk and ni; thus, it remains the details of the system’s initial conditions. Without further insights, we cannot predict the steady state through the system’s conserved quantities, which are supposed to be substantially fewer than the number of degrees of freedom of the whole system.

Failure of the ETH

From the perspective of the “universality” of thermalization, the prediction of the steady state of the spin subsystem gets a loss of effectiveness, which can be observed from the breakdown of ETH in QW. Conventionally, the ETH states that each energy eigenstate can be thermal, that is, any eigenstate with energy Eα locally equals the uniformly distributed ME, which can be expressed as53

TrBEαEα=TrBIHδEMEdimHδEME 1

where TrB takes the trace over the bath, dimHδEME denotes the dimension of the Hilbert subspace HδEME spanned by the eigenstates whose energy belongs to the energy window [EαδEME,Eα+δEME], and IHδEME is the identity matrix defined on this subspace. Additionally, the energy window whose size is determined by δEME should be macroscopically small to make energy fluctuation small but microscopically large to cover enough energy levels. The ETH guarantees that any superposition state of the energy eigenstates with similar energy can give the same local reduced density matrix, recovering the “universality” of the thermalization. While the ETH is sufficient for understanding the thermalization in non-integrable quantum systems, the existence of the non-trivial conserved quantities and energy degeneracy breaks the validity of this hypothesis down in integrable systems14. For the case of the QW model, since the energy eigenstates with opposite momentum ±k have the same energy, without loss of generality, the system’s eigenstate in the degenerate subspace with energy E0 can be represented as E0=a+nH(k0)k0+anH(k0)k0, where a± are the normalized complex amplitudes. However, as shown in Supplementary Section C, the reduced density matrix of this eigenstate explicitly depends on the details of the amplitudes a±, indicating a failure of the ETH.

Generalized thermalization in QW

Even though the spin subsystem cannot relax to a thermal state, we show herein that the steady state ρst can still be predicted by the generalized micro-canonical ensemble (GME)28,54 and exhibits generalized thermalization (see the Supplementary Section D for details). To understand this generalized thermalization28, the ETH should be extended by generalizing the system’s energy eigenstates to the mutual eigenstates of the Hamiltonian Heff and the additional non-trivial conserved quantity -- momentum K=k[π,π]kkk with k in the first Brillouin zone. According to the GETH, each mutual eigenstate Eα,kβ with the energy Eα and momentum kβ can be generalized thermal, that is, the mutual eigenstate with energy Eα and momentum kβ locally equals the GME state, which can be expressed as54

TrBEα,kβEα,kβ=TrBIH{δEGME,δkGME}dimH{δEGME,δkGME} 2

where H{δEGME,δkGME} is the Hilbert subspace, which is spanned by the eigenstates whose energy and momentum are within the energy window [EαδEGME,Eα+δEGME] and momentum window [kβδkGME,kβ+δkGME] respectively, and IH{δEGME,δkGME} is the identity matrix in this subspace. Moreover, these windows of conserved quantities should also be macroscopically small but microscopically large. For convenience, we label the reduced density matrix of the spin subsystem on the right-hand side of Eq. (2) as ρGETH(Eα,kβ). Based on the GETH, any superposition state of the mutual eigenstates with similar conserved quantities can locally relax to the same reduced state, which is independent of the details of the initial state. Consequently, the “universality” of the steady state ρst can be recovered. Particularly, the degeneracy of the energy eigenstate causing the failure of the ETH disappears in the mutual eigenstate under GETH. Herein, in a photonic discrete-time QW, we will experimentally verify the GETH and generalized thermalization. As an isolated integrable quantum system, its energy level has two-fold degeneracy, and there exist additional non-trivial conserved quantities.

Experimental results

Observation of the spin subsystem equilibration

The photonic QW was implemented based on the time-multiplexing protocol depicted in Fig. 2b. We took the two pseudo-spin states H(V)() of a single photon to composite the spin (coin) subsystem, where H(V) denotes the horizontal (vertical) polarization, and adopted its arriving time to engineer the lattice subsystem. Initially, the walker is localized at the original site (x = 0); after an n-step walk, it will occupy the sites xn and P(x>n)=0.

As discussed above, to verify the validity of the GETH, an essential and quite challenging step is to initialize the system to the superposition states of the mutual eigenstates of two conserved quantities {H,K} within small windows. As illustrated in Fig. 2b and detailedly described in the “Methods”, we initialized the system in a product state by applying the quantum state engineering technique, which reads: Ψ(0)=ψ0Sψ0B=ak0nk0u+bk0nk0dxeixk0P(x)x. The nk0 u(d) denotes the eigenstates of nH(k0)σ with the corresponding eigenvalue ±1, ak0 and bk0 are the complex coefficients satisfying ak02+bk02=1, P(x) is a Gaussian distribution peaked around the original site x=0 and with a standard deviation Δx, and eixk0 gives the local phase of each site. Consequently, the initial state in the momentum space takes the form of a Gaussian wavepacket peaked around k0 and with a standard deviation Δk=1/(2Δx). In addition, when Δk0 and bk0=0 (ak0=0), the initial state can obviously approach the upper (lower) band mutual eigenstate nk0u(d)k0 whose energy is Ek0u(d)=±E(k) and momentum is k0, satisfying the condition in the GETH. Benefiting from the quantum state engineering technique, we can verify the GETH by asymptotically reducing Δk. It is noteworthy that the Δk in our experiments also plays a similar role as the half-width of the conserved quantity window δkGME in Eq. (2).

In the left two panels of Fig. 3a, we plot the experimentally measured distributions P(x) of the system’s two initial states, both of which occupy seven sites and have a Gaussian fitting with Δx=0.9 and Δx=0.5, respectively. Besides, the global wavefunction can also be reconstructed using an interferometric measurement approach40. Thus, by applying a Fourier transform, we can further obtain the associated wavefunction in the momentum space and its probability distribution P(k) centered at k0 = 0, which are shown in the right two panels. After preparing the bath state, the coin state of interest can further be initialized in ψ0S=y.

Fig. 3. Observing the spin subsystem equilibration.

Fig. 3

a Measured initial Gaussian distributions (orange bars in the left two panels) P(x) with corresponding Δx=0.9 and Δx=0.5 in the lattice space, and the associated distributions (solid orange lines in the right two panels) P(k) with corresponding Δk=0.56 and Δk=1.0 in momentum space. The gray bars and solid gray lines represent the theoretical simulations, and the gray regions denote the width (2δk=22ln2Δk) of the distributions. b Fidelity F(ρ¯tρDE) (yellow and green symbols) between the measured time-averaged coin state and diagonal ensemble prediction at each time step starting from the prepared two-bath states coupling to the coin state y. The lines (solid yellow and dashed green) give the theoretical simulations. c Bloch sphere representations of the initial coin states (gray points), ten-step-averaged coin states (black points), and diagonal ensemble predictions (pointed by the orange arrows). All the error bars represent the statistical errors estimated by applying the Monte Carlo simulations

Relaxing the spin subsystem of interest, which is coupled to a bath (discrete infinite lattice), can then be investigated after the proper initialization. The dynamical evolution of the whole system is chosen to be governed by an effective Hamiltonian Heff(7.9π/9,8π/9). The spin–orbit coupling results in the mixture of the spin subsystem, whose time-averaged state ρ¯t finally relaxes to a steady state and is in the vicinity of it in most of the time steps, indicating the equilibration of the subsystem51,52. As depicted in Fig. 3b, we presented the measured fidelity at different time steps, which is defined as Fρ¯tρDE=TrρDEρ¯tρDE2 (where ρDE denotes the state obtained by tracing the bath from the “diagonal ensemble” of the mutual eigenstates) and gives the degree of the overlap between the two states. After a relaxation of a six-step walk, the measured fidelity approaches 1 and can maintain this maximal overlap in the subsequent time steps, showing that the spin subsystem can equilibrate to the prediction of a diagonal ensemble. Actually, the steady state of any initial state (arbitrary Δk here) can always be predicted by the diagonal ensemble, which depends on the details of the initial conditions when the GETH is not incorporated. We further plot the ten-step-averaged coin states ρ¯10 (represented by the black points) and the diagonal ensemble predictions (pointed by the orange arrows) in Fig. 3c. Their congruence in the Bloch sphere gives an experimental equivalence between the steady state obtained by the time average and diagonal ensemble prediction. The equilibrium time scale of the spin subsystem Teq is dependent on the local observable of interest, initial state, and Hamiltonian parameters55 (for details, see Supplementary Section B). To balance the clearness of the experimental phenomena and the experimental challenge for maintaining coherence, here we choose the proper set of {θ1,θ2} with Teq being small and thus a 10-step QW is enough for the spin subsystem equilibrium.

Verification of the generalized ETH

To verify the GETH in our integrable system, the initial state of the system takes the form of a Gaussian wavepacket peaked around k0=6π/13 with a width Δk, whose coin state is set to be nk0d. The following spin subsystem relaxation, which was effectively governed by two Hamiltonians with {θ1,θ2} equaling {π/9,6π/9} and {π/9,4π/9}, was experimentally observed. We compared its steady state ρst that was experimentally estimated by ρ¯10 with the GME prediction ρGETH(Ek0d,k0), and the measured fidelity F(ρstρGETH) as a function of initial Δk is plotted as points in Fig. 4a. The GME is chosen within a momentum window centered at k0 with a half-width δkGME=0.4 (the associated energy window half-width δEGME can be further determined based on the function E(k)), as exhibited in the inset. Herein, we suppose that the lattice space is infinite and P(x>n)=0 in real space, where n is the total number of steps taken by the walker. Consequently, within a proper momentum window, the macroscopically small but microscopically large condition can always be satisfied.

Fig. 4 . Verifying the generalized eigenstate thermalization hypothesis.

Fig. 4

a Fidelity F(ρstρGETH) between the measured steady state ρst and GME prediction ρGETH against the standard deviation Δk for a walk with (blue circles) Heff(π/9,6π/9) and (purple diamonds) Heff(π/9,4π/9). The colored dashed and solid lines represent the theoretical simulations for the steady state estimated by ρ¯t=10 and ρ¯t, respectively. The dashed black line represents the upper bound of the initial Δk; below this line, the fidelity always approaches 1. The insets illustrate the effective band structures (colored solid lines with left-hand scale) and occupations of the initial state (with Δk=0.3 as an example) on the two bands (gray curves with right-hand scale). The expectation of the energy and momentum of the initial state is E0 and k0, respectively. In the insets, the vertical gray regions and horizontal colored regions show the chosen momentum window with δk=0.4 and associated energy window. b Measured expectations of the three spin observables of the reconstructed spinor eigenvectors nH(k) within the chosen energy-momentum window. The upper and lower panels show the results for Heff(π/9,6π/9) and Heff(π/9,4π/9), respectively. The colored dashed lines give the theoretical results for ρGETH(Ek0d,k0), and the translucent shadings illustrate the statistical errors

Besides, by choosing a different Δk, that is, the initial state corresponding to different superposition states of the mutual eigenstates within the window δk, we observed that the F(ρstρGETH) approximates 1 and gets stable. This occurs when the initial Δk is smaller than a value Δkmax, which is guided by the vertical dashed line and can be theoretically estimated based on the maximal value of the momentum standard deviation of the GME ΔkGME, as shown in Supplementary Section D. Thus, the results directly indicate the “university” of the local steady state, that is, it is independent of the detailed form of the superposition state and only depends on the conserved quantities {Ek0d,k0} when Δk is small enough (<0.340 in this situation). In addition, F(ρstρGETH) approaches 1 when Δk0 gives a direct verification of the GETH. For large Δk, the lower fidelity indicates that the steady state differs from the prediction of the GME, signifying its failure.

Further, the expectation of a local observable almost does not fluctuate between the mutual eigenstates that have a similar value of the conserved quantities with each other6,27 is another verification of the validity of the GETH. In our system, the spinor eigenvectors nH(k) can be experimentally obtained through the dynamics of spin state40, from which we can further get the expectations of the spin observables along with the energy-momentum of the system. In Fig. 4b, we plot the expectations of {σx,σy,σz} of nH(k) within the energy-momentum window. Note that both the momentum and energy windows are necessary to the tiny fluctuation of the expectations. Thus, if we only limit one conserved quantity (such as energy in ETH), and have no information about the other quantity (momentum), then nH(k) have two different choices (±k) because of its degeneracy. Therefore, the expectations of observables can have large fluctuation. However, using both of the two conserved quantities, the tiny fluctuation of the expectations can be guaranteed, as shown in Fig. 4b.

Observation of the generalized thermalization

Besides the superposition state of mutual eigenstates with conserved quantities in a small connected window, the GETH can also be employed to understand the generalized thermalization of the superposition state of mutual eigenstates in two separated windows28 (for details, see Supplementary Section E).

As an example (for another example, see Supplementary Section E), we investigated the relaxation of the coherent superposition of the mutual eigenstates given by Ψ(0)=kk0<δkaknku+bknkdP(k)k. Experimentally, the initial state remains a Gaussian wavepacket peaked around k0=6π/13 with different standard deviations Δk and the coin state ψ0S is prepared in y, as shown in the inset of Fig. 5a. Moreover, we observed the following evolution, which is governed by an effective Hamiltonian Heff(7π/9,π/9), and plot the measured fidelity F(ρ¯tρGME) for five initial states with different Δk in Fig. 5a. Note that ρGME denotes the local reduced state obtained by tracing the bath from the GME, whose energy-momentum window is shown in the inset.

Fig. 5 . Observing the generalized thermalization.

Fig. 5

a Fidelity (dots) between the measured time-averaged coin states ρ¯t and GME prediction ρGME against the time steps, and b their values (opaque bars) after a ten-step walk. The initial Gaussian states have five different widths Δk but the same coin state y, and then evolve governed by Heff(7π/9,π/9). The colored solid lines in (a) and transparent bars in (b) represent the theoretical simulations. The inset in (a) shows the effective band structures (solid green lines with left-hand scale), the occupations of the two bands for one initial state with Δk=0.3 as an example (gray curves with right-hand scale). The expected energy and momentum of the initial state is E0 and k0, respectively. After expanding the initial state, the shift of the mean momentum of each band occupation relative to the k0 takes the following form: δkP(k)O(kk0), where O denotes the order of the function. Moreover, the vertical gray and horizontal green regions depict the chosen momentum window with δkGME=0.4 and associated energy window, respectively. The dashed line in (b) indicates the lower bound (99.42%) of the measured F(ρ¯10ρDE)

Besides, the experimental results show that the measured fidelity reaches a steady value, indicating the steady state of the spin subsystem. The steady state should match ρDE for any initial state, and all the experimentally measured values of fidelity between them are greater than 99.42% represented by the dashed line in Fig. 5b.

Similar to the situation in a connected window, when the initial Δk is large (for example, Δk=1.0, 0.7, and 0.6) where the GME prediction fails as experimentally demonstrated before, the steady states estimated by ρ¯10 cannot be properly predicted by ρGME, as shown in the Fig. 5b. However, when Δk is sufficiently small (Δk<Δkmax=0.340), such as Δk=0.3 and 0.25, due to the validity of the GETH, the steady states agree with the prediction of the GME. Thus, the validity of the GETH can also render the diagonal ensemble and the GME to be locally equivalent in this extended situation.

Discussion

Herein, in an isolated integrable quantum system, we experimentally observed that the relaxation of the spin subsystem of interest always agrees with the prediction of the “diagonal ensemble” of the mutual eigenstates. Importantly, by applying the quantum state engineering and eigenvectors reconstruction techniques, the GETH has been verified for the first time in an asymptotic method by comparing the steady spin state, starting from the initial states with different distribution widths, with the GME prediction. We further demonstrated that the combination of the GETH and the diagonal ensemble can be used to understand the generalized thermalization in integrable systems. Although these results in our work utilize the quantum coherence involving the two inner degrees of freedom of the photons, it doesn’t rely on whether the system involves the higher-order coherence and can then be used to promote understanding of the quantum thermalization in a many-body version. Moreover, our novel setup with low transmission loss also has the potential to implement protocols involving high-order coherence. We believe our experimental findings as well as the creative platform could enable the understanding of the basic theory of quantum statistical mechanics in a general quantum system.

Materials and methods

Discrete-time QW

The unitary operator for a complete step of QW is given by U=TR2TR1, where the coin-tossing R1(2) acting on coin space can be any operator from the SU(2) group, and T()=xx±1x()()+xx()() denote the spin-dependent hopping operators. The exact form of the effective Hamiltonian Heff depends on the details of the coin-tossing. Given the rotations along the y-axis, i.e., R1(2)=Ry(θ1(2)) with θ1(2) representing the rotation angles, we can get the momentum-dependent energy cos[E(k)]=cos(θ1/2)cos(θ2/2)cosksin(θ1/2)sin(θ2/2) and the corresponding spinor eigenvector49

nHx(k)=sin(θ1/2)cos(θ2/2)sinksin[E(k)]nHy(k)=sin(θ1/2)cos(θ2/2)cosk+cos(θ1/2)sin(θ2/2)sin[E(k)]nHz(k)=cos(θ1/2)cos(θ2/2)sinksin[E(k)] 3

Heralded single-photon source

The pulsed laser emitting from a Ti:Sapphire source (Mira 900) has a central wavelength at 800 nm, a repetition rate of 76 MHz, and a pulse duration of 150 fs, and it is focused by applying L1 to pump a piece of nonlinear crystal BBO1. Moreover, the type-I second harmonic occurring in BBO1 then generates the frequency-doubled ultraviolet laser with a central wavelength of 400 nm and an average power of 150 mW, which is horizontally polarized and focused to pump the second crystal BBO2. The type-II beam-like SPDC that occurs in BBO2 generates correlated photon pairs, where the signal and idler photons are centered at 780 and 821 nm, respectively. The photon pairs are collimated using L4 with a focal length f = 150 mm, and the signal photons heralded by the idler photons are adopted as the walker and guided to the QW module.

Photonic time-multiplexing implementation

QW has been implemented in various physical systems56. Among them, linear optics plays a pivotal role in implementing QW, where the spatial57, temporal47, and orbital angular momentum58 degrees of freedom of photons have been utilized. Previous time-multiplexing configuration employing fiber loop is very compact and enables the realization of large-scale QW. However, the existence of an unavoidable high photon loss necessitates the use of an attenuated coherent laser. In our time-multiplexing implementation, the spin–orbit coupling was realized using the birefringent calcite crystal collinearly cut, whose length is designed to be 8.98 mm yielding a time shift of 5 ps between the two orthogonal polarizations. Thus, a single-photon pulse train having an equal interval of 5 ps comprises the lattice space. Moreover, this QW protocol is compact, and without its extra loss, guaranteeing its applicability to single-photon scenarios. A coin-tossing RSU(2) can be achieved by employing the universal single-qubit gate acting on polarization, which is usually a set of wave plates, i.e., QWP-HWP-QWP in sequence. For the case of rotating along the y-axis, the set of wave plates can be reduced to a single HWP.

Initial state preparation

QW with time-dependent SU(2) coins can be applied to engineer arbitrary high-dimensional quantum state (qudit) over the lattice space44,45. To engineer the qudit state, the walker is initially located at the original site (x=0) with its coin encoded in H, and at the end of the walk, the coin is projected into an unbiased base +=12H+V. Moreover, the set of the time-dependent coin operators are found using a numerical optimization, thereby maximizing the fidelity (as a function of the rotation angles) between the target state and final lattice state after the coin projection. In our implementations, the target state is a Gaussian wavepacket with standard deviation Δx and the local phase of each site eixk0. By applying a Fourier transform, it can also be described in the associated momentum space as ψ0B=A0k[π,π]e(kk0)2/(2Δk)2k peaked around the momentum k0, where Δk denotes the standard deviation and A0 is a normalization constant. The initial coin state ψ0S can be arbitrarily set using the wave plates.

Supplementary information

41377_2022_887_MOESM1_ESM.pdf (1MB, pdf)

Supplementary Information for Experimental Verification of Generalized Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis in an Integrable System

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Innovation Program for Quantum Science and Technology (No. 2021ZD0301200), National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 12022401, 11874343, 62075207, 61975195, 12122410, 92065107, 61725504, 11774335, and 11821404), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Nos. WK2470000030, WK2470000034, and WK2030380017), the CAS Youth Innovation Promotion Association (No. 2020447), the Anhui Initiative in Quantum Information Technologies (No. AHY060300), the Key Program of the Education Department of Anhui Province (No. KJ2021A0917). Q.-Q.W. acknowledges support from China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (No. 2021M703108).

Author contributions

Y.-J.H. proposed this project. Q.-Q.W., X.-Y.X., Y.-J.H., and C.-F.L. conceived and designed the experiments. Q.-Q.W. performed the experiments assisted by W.-W.P. and Z.C. Experimental data was analyzed by Q.-Q.W., X.-Y.X., Y.-J.H., Z.C., G.C., K.S., and J.-S.X. Theoretical analysis and the interpretation were developed by S.-J.T., Y.-J.H., and C.-F.L. The paper was mainly written by Q.-Q.W., S.-J.T., X.-Y.X., and Y.-J.H., and all authors discussed its contents. C.-F.L. and G.-C.G. supervised the project.

Data availability

Source data are available for this paper. All other data that support the plots within this paper and other findings of this study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

These authors contributed equally: Qin-Qin Wang, Si-Jing Tao.

Contributor Information

Xiao-Ye Xu, Email: xuxiaoye@ustc.edu.cn.

Yong-Jian Han, Email: smhan@ustc.edu.cn.

Chuan-Feng Li, Email: cfli@ustc.edu.cn.

Supplementary information

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41377-022-00887-5.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

41377_2022_887_MOESM1_ESM.pdf (1MB, pdf)

Supplementary Information for Experimental Verification of Generalized Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis in an Integrable System

Data Availability Statement

Source data are available for this paper. All other data that support the plots within this paper and other findings of this study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.


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