Determination of dynamical quantum phase transitions in strongly correlated many-body systems using Loschmidt cumulants
Sebastiano Peotta, Fredrik Brange, Aydin Deger, Teemu Ojanen and, Christian Flindt

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method using Loschmidt cumulants to predict dynamical quantum phase transitions in strongly correlated many-body systems after a quench, providing insights into non-equilibrium critical behavior.
Contribution
It develops a novel approach to determine critical times of dynamical phase transitions in interacting systems using Loschmidt cumulants, applicable to higher dimensions and near-term quantum computers.
Findings
Accurately predicts critical times in the interacting Kitaev chain.
Maps thermodynamic lines of complex times where Loschmidt amplitude vanishes.
Shows potential for experimental measurement via energy fluctuations.
Abstract
Dynamical phase transitions extend the notion of criticality to non-stationary settings and are characterized by sudden changes in the macroscopic properties of time-evolving quantum systems. Investigations of dynamical phase transitions combine aspects of symmetry, topology, and non-equilibrium physics, however, progress has been hindered by the notorious difficulties of predicting the time evolution of large, interacting quantum systems. Here, we tackle this outstanding problem by determining the critical times of interacting many-body systems after a quench using Loschmidt cumulants. Specifically, we investigate dynamical topological phase transitions in the interacting Kitaev chain and in the spin-1 Heisenberg chain. To this end, we map out the thermodynamic lines of complex times, where the Loschmidt amplitude vanishes, and identify the intersections with the imaginary axis, which…
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.
