Non-Hermitian Anderson Transport
Sebastian Weidemann, Mark Kremer, Stefano Longhi, Alexander Szameit

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates both theoretically and experimentally that dissipative disordered systems can exhibit a novel form of Anderson transport characterized by super-diffusive spreading and large jumps, despite all eigenstates being localized.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of Anderson transport in non-Hermitian disordered systems, revealing a new transport mechanism beyond eigenstate localization.
Findings
Experimental evidence of super-diffusive spreading
Observation of ultra-far jumps between localized states
Theoretical prediction of Anderson transport in dissipative media
Abstract
Andersons groundbreaking discovery that the presence of stochastic imperfections in a crystal may result in a sudden breakdown of conductivity revolutionized our understanding of disordered media. After stimulating decades of lively studies, Anderson localization has found intriguing applications in various areas of physics, such mesoscopic physics, strongly-correlated systems, light localization, cavity quantum electrodynamics, random lasers, and topological phases of matter. However, a fundamental assumption in Andersons treatment is that no energy is exchanged with the environment, in contrast to the common knowledge that every real system is subject to dissipation. Recently, a growing number of theoretical studies has addressed disordered media with dissipation. In particular it has been predicted that in such systems all eigenstates exponentially localize, similar to the original…
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