Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Many-body localization and the area law in two dimensions

332   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Kevin S.C. Decker
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

We study the high-energy phase diagram of a two-dimensional spin-$frac{1}{2}$ Heisenberg model on a square lattice in the presence of disorder. The use of large-scale tensor network numerics allows us to compute the bi-partite entanglement entropy for systems of up to $30times7$ lattice sites. We demonstrate the existence of a finite many-body localized phase for large disorder strength $W$ for which the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis is violated. Moreover, we show explicitly that the area law holds for excited states in this phase and determine an estimate for the critical $W_{rm{c}}$ where the transition to the ergodic phase occurs.



rate research

Read More

Isolated quantum systems with quenched randomness exhibit many-body localization (MBL), wherein they do not reach local thermal equilibrium even when highly excited above their ground states. It is widely believed that individual eigenstates capture this breakdown of thermalization at finite size. We show that this belief is false in general and that a MBL system can exhibit the eigenstate properties of a thermalizing system. We propose that localized approximately conserved operators (l$^*$-bits) underlie localization in such systems. In dimensions $d>1$, we further argue that the existing MBL phenomenology is unstable to boundary effects and gives way to l$^*$-bits. Physical consequences of l$^*$-bits include the possibility of an eigenstate phase transition within the MBL phase unrelated to the dynamical transition in $d=1$ and thermal eigenstates at all parameters in $d>1$. Near-term experiments in ultra-cold atomic systems and numerics can probe the dynamics generated by boundary layers and emergence of l$^*$-bits.
The many-body localization transition (MBLT) between ergodic and many-body localized phase in disordered interacting systems is a subject of much recent interest. Statistics of eigenenergies is known to be a powerful probe of crossovers between ergodic and integrable systems in simpler examples of quantum chaos. We consider the evolution of the spectral statistics across the MBLT, starting with mapping to a Brownian motion process that analytically relates the spectral properties to the statistics of matrix elements. We demonstrate that the flow from Wigner-Dyson to Poisson statistics is a two-stage process. First, fractal enhancement of matrix elements upon approaching the MBLT from the metallic side produces an effective power-law interaction between energy levels, and leads to a plasma model for level statistics. At the second stage, the gas of eigenvalues has local interaction and level statistics belongs to a semi-Poisson universality class. We verify our findings numerically on the XXZ spin chain. We provide a microscopic understanding of the level statistics across the MBLT and discuss implications for the transition that are strong constraints on possible theories.
The entanglement spectrum of the reduced density matrix contains information beyond the von Neumann entropy and provides unique insights into exotic orders or critical behavior of quantum systems. Here, we show that strongly disordered systems in the many-body localized phase have power-law entanglement spectra, arising from the presence of extensively many local integrals of motion. The power-law entanglement spectrum distinguishes many-body localized systems from ergodic systems, as well as from ground states of gapped integrable models or free systems in the vicinity of scale-invariant critical points. We confirm our results using large-scale exact diagonalization. In addition, we develop a matrix-product state algorithm which allows us to access the eigenstates of large systems close to the localization transition, and discuss general implications of our results for variational studies of highly excited eigenstates in many-body localized systems.
Recent work by De Roeck et al. [Phys. Rev. B 95, 155129 (2017)] has argued that many-body localization (MBL) is unstable in two and higher dimensions due to a thermalization avalanche triggered by rare regions of weak disorder. To examine these arguments, we construct several models of a finite ergodic bubble coupled to an Anderson insulator of non-interacting fermions. We first describe the ergodic region using a GOE random matrix and perform an exact diagonalization study of small systems. The results are in excellent agreement with a refined theory of the thermalization avalanche that includes transient finite-size effects, lending strong support to the avalanche scenario. We then explore the limit of large system sizes by modeling the ergodic region via a Hubbard model with all-to-all random hopping: the combined system, consisting of the bubble and the insulator, can be reduced to an effective Anderson impurity problem. We find that the spectral function of a local operator in the ergodic region changes dramatically when coupling to a large number of localized fermionic states---this occurs even when the localized sites are weakly coupled to the bubble. In principle, for a given size of the ergodic region, this may arrest the avalanche. However, this back-action effect is suppressed and the avalanche can be recovered if the ergodic bubble is large enough. Thus, the main effect of the back-action is to renormalize the critical bubble size.
Subsystems of strongly disordered, interacting quantum systems can fail to thermalize because of the phenomenon of many-body localization (MBL). In this article, we explore a tensor network description of the eigenspectra of such systems. Specifically, we will argue that the presence of a complete set of local integrals of motion in MBL implies an efficient representation of the entire spectrum of energy eigenstates with a single tensor network, a emph{spectral} tensor network. Our results are rigorous for a class of idealized systems related to MBL with integrals of motion of finite support. In one spatial dimension, the spectral tensor network allows for the efficient computation of expectation values of a large class of operators (including local operators and string operators) in individual energy eigenstates and in ensembles.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا