Dynamics in the presence of local symmetry-breaking impurities
Abstract
Continuous symmetries lead to universal slow relaxation of correlation functions in quantum many-body systems. In this work, we study how local symmetry-breaking impurities affect the dynamics of these correlation functions using Brownian quantum circuits, which we expect to apply to generic nonintegrable systems with the same symmetries. While explicitly breaking the symmetry is generally expected to lead to eventual restoration of full ergodicity, we find that approximately conserved quantities that survive under such circumstances can still induce slow relaxation. This can be understood using a super-Hamiltonian formulation, where low-lying excitations determine the late-time dynamics and exact ground states correspond to conserved quantities. We show that in one dimension, symmetry-breaking impurities modify diffusive and subdiffusive behaviors associated with U(1) and dipole conservation at late times, e.g., by increasing power-law decay exponents of the decay of autocorrelation functions. This stems from the fact that for these symmetries, impurities are relevant in the renormalization-group sense, e.g., bulk impurities effectively disconnect the system, completely modifying both temporal and spatial correlations. On the other hand, for an impurity that disrupts strong Hilbert space fragmentation, the super-Hamiltonian only acquires an exponentially small gap, leading to prethermal plateaus in autocorrelation functions which extend for times that scale exponentially with the distance to the impurity. Overall, our approach systematically characterizes how symmetry-breaking impurities affect relaxation dynamics in symmetric systems.
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 Jason Alicea, Yue Liu, and Sara Murciano for inspiring discussions on defect line actions and their relation to impurity problems on previous Collaborations; Daniil Asafov, Shankar Balasubramanian, Alexey Khudorozhkov, Ethan Lake, Ruchira Mishra, Federica Surace, and Sara Vanovac for discussions of Hilbert space fragmentation and hydrodynamic descriptions in various contexts; and Marcos Rigol for discussion of thermalization with perturbation. P.S. acknowledges support from the Caltech Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NSF Grant No.PHY-1733907), and the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at Caltech. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy EXC-2111-390814868, TRR 360 (Project-ID 492547816), FOR 5522 (Project-ID 499180199), and the Munich Quantum Valley, which is supported by the Bavarian state government with funds from the Hightech Agenda Bayern Plus. S.M. acknowledges support from the Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST). O.I.M. acknowledges support by the National Science Foundation through Grant No. DMR-2001186.
Data Availability
Data analysis and simulation codes are available on Zenodo upon reasonable request [133].
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Additional details
Related works
- Is new version of
- Discussion Paper: arXiv:2503.14608 (arXiv)
- Is supplemented by
- Dataset: 10.5281/zenodo.15437680 (DOI)
Funding
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-1733907
- California Institute of Technology
- Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics -
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
- EXC-2111-390814868
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
- 492547816
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
- 499180199
- Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology
- National Science Foundation
- DMR-2001186
Dates
- Accepted
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2025-09-10