State-Dependent Mobility Edge in Kinetically Constrained Models
Abstract
In this work, we show that the kinetically constrained quantum East model lies between a quantum scarred and a many-body localized system featuring an unconventional type of mobility edge in the spectrum. We name this scenario the mobility edge: while the system does not exhibit a sharp separation in energy between thermal and nonthermal eigenstates, the abundance of nonthermal eigenstates results in slow entanglement growth for initial states, such as product states, below a finite energy density. We characterize the state-dependent mobility edge by looking at the complexity of classically simulating dynamics using tensor networks for system sizes well beyond those accessible via exact diagonalization. Focusing on initial product states, we observe a qualitative change in the dynamics of the bond dimension needed as a function of their energy density. Specifically, the bond dimension typically grows in time up to a certain energy density, where we locate the state-dependent mobility edge, enabling simulations for long times. Above this energy density, the bond dimension typically grows , making the simulation practically unfeasible beyond short times, as generally expected in interacting theories. We correlate the polynomial growth of the bond dimension to the presence of many nonthermal eigenstates around that energy density, a subset of which we compute via tensor networks. The outreach of our findings encompasses quantum sampling problems and the efficient simulation of quantum circuits beyond Clifford families.
Copyright and License
Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.
Acknowledgement
We thank Juan P. Garrahan and Shane P. Kelly for insightful discussions. This project has been supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) through the Project-ID 429529648—TRR 306 QuCoLiMa (“Quantum Cooperativity of Light and Matter”) and by the Dynamics and Topology Center, funded by the State of Rhineland Palatinate. Parts of this research were conducted using the Mogon supercomputer and/or advisory services offered by Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz [101], which is a member of the AHRP (Alliance for High Performance Computing in Rhineland Palatinate [102]) and the Gauss Alliance e.V. We gratefully acknowledge the computing time granted on the Mogon supercomputer at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz [101] through the project “DysQCorr.” M.B. acknowledges the support and the resources provided by PARAM Shivay Facility under the National Supercomputing Mission, Government of India at the Indian Institute of Technology, Varanasi.
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Additional details
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
- 429529648-TRR 306
- State of Rhineland Palatinate
- Accepted
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2024-11-19Accepted
- Caltech groups
- AWS Center for Quantum Computing
- Publication Status
- Published