Localization from Infinitesimal Kinetic Grading: Finite-size Scaling, Kibble-Zurek Dynamics and Applications in Sensing
Argha Debnath, Ayan Sahoo, and Debraj Rakshit

TL;DR
This paper investigates a one-dimensional lattice model with site-dependent hopping amplitudes, analyzing its localization transition, critical behavior, nonequilibrium dynamics via Kibble-Zurek mechanism, and potential for quantum-enhanced sensing.
Contribution
It introduces a kinetic grading-induced localization transition and demonstrates its application in quantum sensing through critical enhancement of quantum Fisher information.
Findings
Finite-size scaling yields critical exponents for localization transition.
Kibble-Zurek mechanism explains nonequilibrium dynamics during ramping.
Critical enhancement of quantum Fisher information enables quantum sensing.
Abstract
We study a one-dimensional lattice model with site-dependent nearest-neighbor hopping amplitudes that follow a power-law profile. The hopping variation is controlled by a grading exponent, , which serves as the tuning parameter of the system. In the thermodynamic limit, the ground state becomes localized in the limit , signaling the presence of a critical point characterized by a diverging localization length. Using exact diagonalization methods, we perform finite-size scaling analysis, and extract the associated critical exponent governing the near-critical behavior. To further characterize the criticality, we analyze inverse participation ratio (IPR), energy gap between the ground and first excited state, and fidelity-susceptibility. We also investigate the nonequilibrium dynamics by linearly ramping the hopping profile at various rates and tracking the…
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