Dynamics and Transport at the Threshold of Many-Body Localization
Sarang Gopalakrishnan, S.A. Parameswaran

TL;DR
This paper reviews the dynamics and transport properties of systems near the many-body localization transition, emphasizing slow relaxation, anomalous transport, and the role of approximately localized degrees of freedom coupled to thermal baths.
Contribution
It provides a unified perspective on nearly-MBL systems, covering various classes and discussing theoretical and numerical methods for studying their dynamics.
Findings
Nearly-MBL systems exhibit slow relaxation and anomalous transport.
Proximity to MBL leads to diverging relaxation times.
Various systems can be understood via localized degrees of freedom coupled to thermal baths.
Abstract
Many-body localized (MBL) systems do not approach thermal equilibrium under their intrinsic dynamics; MBL and conventional thermalizing systems form distinct dynamical phases of matter, separated by a phase transition at which equilibrium statistical mechanics breaks down. True MBL is known to occur only under certain stringent conditions for perfectly isolated one-dimensional systems, with Hamiltonians that have strictly short-range interactions and lack any continuous non-Abelian symmetries. However, in practice, even systems that are not strictly MBL can be nearly MBL, with equilibration rates that are far slower than their other intrinsic timescales; thus, anomalously slow relaxation occurs in a much broader class of systems than strict MBL. In this review we address transport and dynamics in such nearly-MBL systems from a unified perspective. Our discussion covers various classes…
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