Rigorous proof that random half-chain initial states in a low-density free-fermion model thermalize, with local particle counts matching equilibrium at long times with high probability.
Many-body localisation implies that eigenvectors are matrix-product states
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abstract
The phenomenon of many-body localisation received a lot of attention recently, both for its implications in condensed-matter physics of allowing systems to be an insulator even at non-zero temperature as well as in the context of the foundations of quantum statistical mechanics, providing examples of systems showing the absence of thermalisation following out-of-equilibrium dynamics. In this work, we establish a novel link between dynamical properties - the absence of a group velocity and transport - with entanglement properties of individual eigenvectors. Using Lieb-Robinson bounds and filter functions, we prove rigorously under simple assumptions on the spectrum that if a system shows strong dynamical localisation, all of its many-body eigenvectors have clustering correlations. In one dimension this implies directly an entanglement area law, hence the eigenvectors can be approximated by matrix-product states. We also show this statement for parts of the spectrum, allowing for the existence of a mobility edge above which transport is possible.
fields
cond-mat.stat-mech 1years
2023 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Nature abhors a vacuum: A simple rigorous example of thermalization in an isolated macroscopic quantum system
Rigorous proof that random half-chain initial states in a low-density free-fermion model thermalize, with local particle counts matching equilibrium at long times with high probability.