Interaction-Induced Weakening of Localization in Few-Particle Disordered Heisenberg Chains


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We investigate real-space localization in the few-particle regime of the XXZ spin-$1/2$ chain with a random magnetic field. Our investigation focuses on the time evolution of the spatial variance of non-equilibrium densities, as resulting for a specific class of initial states, namely, pure product states of densely packed particles. Varying the strength of both particle-particle interactions and disorder, we numerically calculate the long-time evolution of the spatial variance $sigma(t)$. For the two-particle case, the saturation of this variance yields an increased but finite localization length, with a parameter scaling different to known results for bosons. We find that this interaction-induced increase is the stronger the more particles are taken into account in the initial condition. We further find that our non-equilibrium dynamics are clearly inconsistent with normal diffusion and instead point to subdiffusive dynamics with $sigma(t) propto t^{1/4}$.

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