Entanglement transitions as a probe of quasiparticles and quantum thermalization
ORAL
Abstract
We introduce a diagnostic for quantum thermalization based on mixed-state entanglement. Specifically, given a pure state on a tripartite system ABC, we study the scaling of entanglement negativity between A and B. For representative states of self-thermalizing systems, either eigenstates or states obtained by a long-time evolution of product states, negativity shows a sharp transition from an area-law scaling to a volume-law scaling when the subsystem volume fraction is tuned across a finite critical value. In contrast, for a system with quasiparticles, it exhibits a volume-law scaling irrespective of the subsystem fraction. For many-body localized systems, the same quantity shows an area-law scaling for eigenstates, and volume-law scaling for long-time evolved product states, irrespective of the subsystem fraction. We provide a combination of numerical observations and analytical arguments in support of our conjecture.
*T. Grover is supported by an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-1752417. T.-C. Lu acknowledges support from KITP Graduate Fellows Program and Graduate Student Research support from the University of California’s Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives (MRP-19-601445).
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Presenters
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Tsung-Cheng Lu
- University of California, San Diego