Moderate-frequency Floquet driving in a quasiperiodic Ising chain suppresses many-body localization and proliferates the many-body critical phase.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
Subsystem information capacity distinguishes critical phases in the generalized Aubry-André-Harper model by exposing spatial heterogeneity, stepwise subsystem-size dependence, and subregion echoes linked to incommensurately distributed zeros in hopping terms.
Uncorrelated hopping disorder in the generalized Aubry-André model enhances localization and turns the transition into a crossover, while spatially correlated disorder causes partial delocalization near strong bonds, as shown in momentum-space lattice experiments with 87Rb atoms.
Adding a constant offset to the quasiperiodic potential in the diamond chain transforms anomalous mobility edges into conventional ones and demonstrates Avila's global theory fails to predict mobility edge locations.
citing papers explorer
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Floquet-induced suppression of thermalization in a quasiperiodic Ising chain
Moderate-frequency Floquet driving in a quasiperiodic Ising chain suppresses many-body localization and proliferates the many-body critical phase.
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Probing critical phases in quasiperiodic systems via subsystem information capacity
Subsystem information capacity distinguishes critical phases in the generalized Aubry-André-Harper model by exposing spatial heterogeneity, stepwise subsystem-size dependence, and subregion echoes linked to incommensurately distributed zeros in hopping terms.
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Localization with Hopping Disorder in Quasi-periodic Synthetic Momentum Lattice
Uncorrelated hopping disorder in the generalized Aubry-André model enhances localization and turns the transition into a crossover, while spatially correlated disorder causes partial delocalization near strong bonds, as shown in momentum-space lattice experiments with 87Rb atoms.
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Inapplicability of Avila's theory in the diamond chain with quasiperiodic disorder
Adding a constant offset to the quasiperiodic potential in the diamond chain transforms anomalous mobility edges into conventional ones and demonstrates Avila's global theory fails to predict mobility edge locations.