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Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
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We identify several distinct phases of thermalization that describe regimes of behavior in isolated, periodically driven (Floquet), mesoscopic quantum chaotic systems. In doing so, we also identify a Floquet thermal ensemble, the “ladder ensemble,” that is qualitatively distinct from the “featureless infinite-temperature” state that has long been assumed to be the appropriate maximum-entropy equilibrium ensemble for driven systems. The phases we find can be coarsely classified by (i) whether or not the system irreversibly exchanges energy of order ω with the drive, i.e., Floquet thermalizes, and (ii) the Floquet thermal ensemble describing the final equilibrium in systems that do Floquet thermalize. These phases are representative of regimes of behavior in mesoscopic systems, but they are sharply defined in a particular large-system limit where the drive frequency ω scales up with system size N as the N → ∞ limit is taken: we examine frequency scalings ranging from a weakly N-dependent ω(N)∼logN, to stronger scalings ranging from ω(N)∼√N to ω(N)∼N. We show that the transition where Floquet thermalization breaks down happens at an extensive drive frequency and, beyond that, systems that do not Floquet thermalize are distinguished based on the presence or absence of rare resonances across Floquet zones. We produce a thermalization phase diagram that is relevant for numerical studies of Floquet systems and experimental studies on small-scale quantum simulators, both of which lack a clean separation of scales between N and ω. A striking prediction of our work is that, under the assumption of perfect isolation, certain realistic quench protocols from simple pure initial states can show Floquet thermalization to a type of Schrodinger-cat state that is a global superposition of states at distinct temperatures. Our work extends and organizes the theory of Floquet thermalization, heating, and equilibrium into the setting of mesoscopic quantum systems.more » « less
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Weakly interacting quasiparticles play a central role in the low-energy description of many phases of quantum matter. At higher energies, however, quasiparticles cease to be well defined in generic many-body systems owing to a proliferation of decay channels. In this review, we discuss the phenomenon of quantum many-body scars, which can give rise to certain species of stable quasiparticles throughout the energy spectrum. This goes along with a set of unusual nonequilibrium phenomena including many-body revivals and nonthermal stationary states. We provide a pedagogical exposition of this physics via a simple yet comprehensive example, that of a spin-1 XY model. We place our discussion in the broader context of symmetry-based constructions of many-body scar states, projector embeddings, and Hilbert space fragmentation. We conclude with a summary of experimental progress and theoretical puzzles.more » « less
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