Local quenches in chaotic quantum systems produce a Renyi-index-tuned hierarchy of entanglement transitions, with S_alpha>1 obeying area law while S_alpha<=1 is volume-law, carried by an O(1)-dimensional dominant Schmidt sector that itself exhibits similar transitions at lower critical indices.
Robustness of Kardar-Parisi-Zhang-like transport in long-range interacting quantum spin chains
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abstract
Isotropic integrable spin chains such as the Heisenberg model feature superdiffusive spin transport belonging to an as-yet-unidentified dynamical universality class closely related to that of Kardar, Parisi, and Zhang (KPZ). To determine whether these results extend to more generic one-dimensional models, particularly those realizable in quantum simulators, we investigate spin and energy transport in non-integrable, long-range Heisenberg models using state-of-the-art tensor network methods. Despite the lack of integrability and the asymptotic expectation of diffusion, for power-law models (with exponent $2 < \alpha < \infty$) we observe long-lived $z=3/2$ superdiffusive spin transport and two-point correlators consistent with KPZ scaling functions, up to times $t \sim 10^3/J$. We conjecture that this KPZ-like transport is due to the proximity of such power-law-interacting models to the integrable family of Inozemtsev models, which we show to also exhibit KPZ-like spin transport across all interaction ranges. Finally, we consider anisotropic spin models naturally realized in Rydberg atom arrays and ultracold polar molecules, demonstrating that a wide range of long-lived, non-diffusive transport can be observed in experimental settings.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Hierarchical entanglement transitions and hidden area-law sectors in quantum many-body dynamics
Local quenches in chaotic quantum systems produce a Renyi-index-tuned hierarchy of entanglement transitions, with S_alpha>1 obeying area law while S_alpha<=1 is volume-law, carried by an O(1)-dimensional dominant Schmidt sector that itself exhibits similar transitions at lower critical indices.