Bridging quantum criticality via many-body scarring
Aiden Daniel, Andrew Hallam, Jean-Yves Desaules, Ana Hudomal, Guo-Xian, Su, Jad C. Halimeh, Zlatko Papi\'c

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum many-body scarring (QMBS) phenomena in the PXP model evolve across quantum critical points, revealing a rich interplay between initial state deformation, system tuning, and persistent non-ergodic dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the continuous evolution of QMBS signatures across phase transitions and proposes a ramping protocol for experimental preparation of scarred states.
Findings
QMBS signatures can smoothly evolve across critical points.
Existence of a continuous family of initial states leading to QMBS.
A ramping protocol for experimental state preparation.
Abstract
Quantum dynamics in certain kinetically-constrained systems can display a strong sensitivity to the initial condition, wherein some initial states give rise to persistent quantum revivals -- a type of weak ergodicity breaking known as `quantum many-body scarring' (QMBS). Recent work [Phys.Rev.B 105, 125123 (2022)] pointed out that QMBS gets destroyed by tuning the system to a quantum critical point, echoing the disappearance of long-range order in the system's ground state at equilibrium. Here we show that this picture can be much richer in systems that display QMBS dynamics from a continuous family of initial conditions: as the system is tuned across the critical point while at the same time deforming the initial state, the dynamical signatures of QMBS at intermediate times can undergo an apparently smooth evolution across the equilibrium phase transition point. We demonstrate this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
