Origin of Hilbert space quantum scars in unconstrained models
Zexian Guo, Bobo Liu, Yu Gao, Ang Yang, Junlin Wang, Jinlou Ma, Lei, Ying

TL;DR
This paper investigates a new class of quantum many-body scars originating from a hypercube subspace in a half-filling Bose-Hubbard model, explaining slow thermalization and fidelity revivals across various lattice configurations.
Contribution
It introduces a Hilbert space quantum scar mechanism based on hypercube geometry, extending understanding beyond constrained models and exploring higher-dimensional systems.
Findings
Identifies slow thermalization due to hypercube subspace structure.
Demonstrates the mechanism across multiple lattice geometries.
Develops a toy model explaining spectral overlaps.
Abstract
Quantum many-body scar is a recently discovered phenomenon weakly violating eigenstate thermalization hypothesis, and it has been extensively studied across various models. However, experimental realizations are mainly based on constrained models such as the model. Inspired by recent experimental observations on the superconducting platform in Refs.~[Nat. Phys. 19, 120 (2022)] and [arXiv:2211.05803], we study a distinct class of quantum many-body scars based on a half-filling hard-core Bose-Hubbard model, which is generic to describe in many experimental platforms. It is the so-called Hilbert space quantum scar as it originates from a subspace with a hypercube geometry weakly connecting to other thermalization regions in Hilbert space. Within the hypercube, a pair of collective Fock states do not directly connect to the thermalization region, resulting in slow thermalization…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
