Instability of many-body localized systems as a phase transition in a nonstandard thermodynamic limit
Author(s): Gopalakrishnan, Sarang; Huse, David A
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Abstract: | The many-body localization (MBL) phase transition is not a conventional thermodynamic phase transition. Thus, to define the phase transition, one should allow the possibility of taking the limit of an infinite system in a way that is not the conventional thermodynamic limit. We explore this for the so-called avalanche instability due to rare thermalizing regions in the MBL phase for systems with quenched randomness in two cases: for short-range interacting systems in more than one spatial dimension and for systems in which the interactions fall off with distance as a power law. We find an unconventional way of scaling these systems so that they do have a type of phase transition. Our arguments suggest that the MBL phase transition in systems with short-range interactions in more than one dimension (or with sufficiently rapidly decaying power laws) is a transition where entanglement in the eigenstates begins to spread into some typical regions: The transition is set by when the avalanches start. Once this entanglement gets started, the system does thermalize. From this point of view, the much-studied case of one-dimensional MBL with short-range interactions is a special case with a different, and in some ways more conventional, type of phase transition. |
Publication Date: | Apr-2019 |
Electronic Publication Date: | 16-Apr-2019 |
Citation: | Gopalakrishnan, Sarang, Huse, David A. (2019). Instability of many-body localized systems as a phase transition in a nonstandard thermodynamic limit. PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 99 (10.1103/PhysRevB.99.134305 |
DOI: | doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.99.134305 |
ISSN: | 2469-9950 |
EISSN: | 2469-9969 |
Type of Material: | Journal Article |
Journal/Proceeding Title: | PHYSICAL REVIEW B |
Version: | Final published version. Article is made available in OAR by the publisher's permission or policy. |
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