Tianci ZhouAndreas W. W. Ludwig
Recent studies found that the diffusive transport of conserved quantities in non-integrable many-body systems has an imprint on quantum entanglement: while the von Neumann entropy of a state grows linearly in time $t$ under a global quench, all $n$th Rényi entropies with $n > 1$ grow with a diffusive scaling $\sqrt{t}$. To understand this phenomenon, we introduce an amplitude $A(t)$, which is the overlap of the time-evolution operator $U(t)$ of the entire system with the tensor product of the two evolution operators of the subsystems of a spatial bipartition. As long as $|A(t)| \ge e^{-\sqrt{Dt}}$, which we argue holds true for generic diffusive non-integrable systems, all $n$th Rényi entropies with $n >1$ (annealed-averaged over initial product states) are bounded from above by $\sqrt{t}$. We prove the following inequality for the disorder average of the amplitude, $\overline{|A(t)|} \ge e^{ - \sqrt{Dt}} $, in a local spin-$\frac{1}{2}$ random circuit with a $\text{U}(1)$ conservation law by mapping to the survival probability of a symmetric exclusion process. Furthermore, we numerically show that the typical decay behaves asymptotically, for long times, as $|A(t)| \sim e^{ - \sqrt{Dt}} $ in the same random circuit as well as in a prototypical non-integrable model with diffusive energy transport but no disorder.
Filiberto AresJosé G. EsteveFernando Falceto
Tiff BrydgesAndreas ElbenPetar JurcevicBenoît VermerschChristine MaierB. P. LanyonP. ZollerR. BlattC. F. Roos
Hatem BarghathiC. M. HerdmanAdrian Del Maestro