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We study the frequency dependence of the optical conductivity $text{Re} , sigma(omega)$ of the Heisenberg spin-$1/2$ chain in the thermal and near the transition to the many-body localized phase induced by the strength of a random $z$-directed magnetic field. Using the method of dynamical quantum typicality, we calculate the real-time dynamics of the spin-current autocorrelation function and obtain the Fourier transform $text{Re} , sigma(omega)$ for system sizes much larger than accessible to standard exact-diagonalization approaches. We find that the low-frequency behavior of $text{Re} , sigma(omega)$ is well described by $text{Re} , sigma(omega) approx sigma_text{dc} + a , |omega|^alpha$, with $alpha approx 1$ in a wide range within the thermal phase and close to the transition. We particularly detail the decrease of $sigma_text{dc}$ in the thermal phase as a function of increasing disorder for strong exchange anisotropies. We further find that the temperature dependence of $sigma_text{dc}$ is consistent with the existence of a mobility edge.
Many-body localized systems in which interactions and disorder come together defy the expectations of quantum statistical mechanics: In contrast to ergodic systems, they do not thermalize when undergoing nonequilibrium dynamics. What is less clear, h
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
We numerically study both the avalanche instability and many-body resonances in strongly-disordered spin chains exhibiting many-body localization (MBL). We distinguish between a finite-size/time MBL regime, and the asymptotic MBL phase, and identify
The many-body localised (MBL) to thermal crossover observed in exact diagonalisation studies remains poorly understood as the accessible system sizes are too small to be in an asymptotic scaling regime. We develop a model of the crossover in short 1D
The collective and quantum behavior of many-body systems may be harnessed to achieve fast charging of energy storage devices, which have been recently dubbed quantum batteries. In this paper, we present an extensive numerical analysis of energy flow