Classical many-body chaos with and without quasiparticles
Thomas Bilitewski, Subhro Bhattacharjee, Roderich Moessner

TL;DR
This paper investigates classical many-body chaos in a Heisenberg magnet, revealing how temperature and dimensionality influence the emergence of quasiparticles, chaos, and transport properties across different regimes, including integrable, chaotic, and scarred phases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of correlations, transport, and chaos in a classical Heisenberg magnet, highlighting the transition between regimes with and without quasiparticles and introducing the concept of scarred regimes.
Findings
At zero temperature, no dynamics occur.
Low temperature leads to integrability with long-lived magnons.
Chaotic regime's Lyapunov exponent relates to spin-wave lifetime.
Abstract
We study correlations, transport and chaos in a Heisenberg magnet as a classical model many-body system. By varying temperature and dimensionality, we can tune between settings with and without symmetry breaking and accompanying collective modes or quasiparticles. We analyse both conventional and out-of-time-ordered spin correlators (`decorrelators') to track the spreading of a spatiotemporally localised perturbation -- the wingbeat of the butterfly -- as well as transport coefficients and Lyapunov exponents. We identify a number of qualitatively different regimes. Trivially, at , there is no dynamics at all. In the limit of low temperature, , integrability emerges, with infinitely long-lived magnons; here the wavepacket created by the perturbation propagates ballistically, yielding a lightcone at the spin wave velocity which thus subsumes the butterfly velocity; inside the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
