Measurement-induced entanglement transitions in many-body localized systems
Oliver Lunt, Arijeet Pal

TL;DR
This paper investigates measurement-induced entanglement transitions in many-body localized systems, revealing how the transition's nature depends on the scrambling properties of the underlying dynamics and identifying critical exponents near the transition.
Contribution
It demonstrates the dependence of measurement-induced entanglement transitions on the scrambling nature of MBL systems and provides critical exponents characterizing the transition.
Findings
Transition occurs at p_c > 0 for scrambled basis, p_c = 0 otherwise.
Critical exponent ν ≈ 1.3, close to 2D percolation.
Logarithmic scaling of Rényi entropies at criticality.
Abstract
The resilience of quantum entanglement to a classicality-inducing environment is tied to fundamental aspects of quantum many-body systems. The dynamics of entanglement has recently been studied in the context of measurement-induced entanglement transitions, where the steady-state entanglement collapses from a volume-law to an area-law at a critical measurement probability . Interestingly, there is a distinction in the value of depending on how well the underlying unitary dynamics scramble quantum information. For strongly chaotic systems, , whereas for weakly chaotic systems, such as integrable models, . In this work, we investigate these measurement-induced entanglement transitions in a system where the underlying unitary dynamics are many-body localized (MBL). We demonstrate that the emergent integrability in an MBL system implies a qualitative…
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