From Integrable to Chaotic Systems: Universal Local Statistics of Lyapunov exponents
Gernot Akemann, Zdzislaw Burda, Mario Kieburg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the transition from deterministic to chaotic behavior in systems modeled by products of random matrices, revealing a universal local statistical behavior of Lyapunov exponents in the large system limit.
Contribution
It introduces a critical double scaling limit for Lyapunov exponents in a random matrix product model, bridging deterministic and universal chaotic regimes.
Findings
Identifies a critical scaling where the spectrum transitions from deterministic to universal statistics.
Shows the local correlations match Dyson's Brownian Motion in the universal regime.
Numerical experiments support the universality and broader applicability of the results.
Abstract
Systems where time evolution follows a multiplicative process are ubiquitous in physics. We study a toy model for such systems where each time step is given by multiplication with an independent random matrix with complex Gaussian elements, the complex Ginibre ensemble. This model allows to explicitly compute the Lyapunov exponents and local correlations amongst them, when the number of factors becomes large. While the smallest eigenvalues always remain deterministic, which is also the case for many chaotic quantum systems, we identify a critical double scaling limit for the rest of the spectrum. It interpolates between the known deterministic behaviour of the Lyapunov exponents for (or fixed) and universal random matrix statistics for (or fixed), characterising chaotic behaviour. After unfolding this agrees with Dyson's Brownian…
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