Non-equilibrium dynamics of the disordered Power of Two model
Kunal Singh, Sayan Choudhury

TL;DR
This study investigates how disorder affects the non-equilibrium dynamics of the Power-of-Two model with long-range interactions, revealing localization phenomena and the persistence of ergodicity at large sizes.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of disorder-induced localization and scrambling dynamics in the Power-of-Two model, highlighting non-monotonic OTOC profiles and size-dependent spectral properties.
Findings
Strong disorder suppresses information spreading and induces localization.
OTOCs show non-monotonic spatial profiles due to nonlocal interactions.
The model remains ergodic in the thermodynamic limit for any finite disorder.
Abstract
Motivated by recent experimental realizations of programmable spin models with long-range interactions, we investigate the non-equilibrium dynamics of the Power-of-Two (PWR2) model. This model consists of sparse long-range couplings between spin- objects separated by . In the absence of disorder, the system exhibits rapid scrambling and fast thermalization. We explore the impact of disorder in this system by analyzing the time evolution of the survival probability, half-chain entanglement entropy, and out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs). We find that sufficiently strong disorder suppresses information spreading and induces localization. Remarkably, in the strong-disorder regime, the OTOCs display a non-monotonic spatial profile arising from the intrinsic nonlocality of the interactions, signaling qualitatively distinct scrambling dynamics compared to conventional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Theoretical and Computational Physics · Quantum Information and Cryptography
