Prominent quantum many-body scars in a truncated Schwinger model
The high level of control and precision achievable in current synthetic quantum matter setups has enabled first attempts at quantum-simulating various intriguing phenomena in condensed matter physics, including those probing thermalization or its absence in closed quantum systems. In a recent work [...
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Published in | arXiv.org |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Paper Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Ithaca
Cornell University Library, arXiv.org
20.04.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The high level of control and precision achievable in current synthetic quantum matter setups has enabled first attempts at quantum-simulating various intriguing phenomena in condensed matter physics, including those probing thermalization or its absence in closed quantum systems. In a recent work [Desaules \textit{et al.} [arXiv:2203.08830], we have shown that quantum many-body scars -- special low-entropy eigenstates that weakly break ergodicity in nonintegrable systems -- arise in spin-\(S\) quantum link models that converge to \((1+1)-\)D lattice quantum electrodynamics (Schwinger model) in the Kogut--Susskind limit \(S\to\infty\). In this work, we further demonstrate that quantum many-body scars exist in a truncated version of the Schwinger model, and are qualitatively more prominent than their counterparts in spin-\(S\) quantum link models. We illustrate this by, among other things, performing a finite-\(S\) scaling analysis that strongly suggests that scarring persists in the truncated Schwinger model in the limit \(S\to\infty\). Although it does not asymptotically converge to the Schwinger model, the truncated formulation is relevant to synthetic quantum matter experiments, and also provides fundamental insight into the nature of quantum many-body scars, their connection to lattice gauge theories, and the thermalization dynamics of the latter. Our conclusions can be readily tested in current cold-atom setups. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2204.01745 |