Entanglement Barriers in Dual-Unitary Circuits
Isaac Reid, Bruno Bertini

TL;DR
This paper computes the exact shape of entanglement barriers in dual-unitary circuits after quantum quenches, revealing distinct behaviors for free and chaotic dynamics and implications for entanglement growth and approximability.
Contribution
It provides an exact analysis of entanglement barriers in dual-unitary circuits for different dynamics, linking them to CFT behaviors and MPS bond dimension effects.
Findings
Free circuits exhibit rational CFT entanglement behavior.
Chaotic circuits show holographic CFT-like entanglement barriers.
Barrier shape remains consistent with increased MPS bond dimension.
Abstract
After quantum quenches in many-body systems, finite subsystems evolve non-trivially in time, eventually approaching a stationary state. In typical situations, the reduced density matrix of a given subsystem begins and ends this endeavour as a low-entangled vector in the space of operators. This means that if its operator space entanglement initially grows (which is generically the case), it must eventually decrease, describing a barrier-shaped curve. Understanding the shape of this "entanglement barrier" is interesting for three main reasons: (i) it quantifies the dynamics of entanglement in the (open) subsystem; (ii) it gives information on the approximability of the reduced density matrix by means of matrix product operators; (iii) it shows qualitative differences depending on the type of dynamics undergone by the system, signalling quantum chaos. Here we compute exactly the shape of…
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