Quantum state complexity meets many-body scars

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Abstract

Scar eigenstates in a many-body system refers to a small subset of non-thermal finite energy density eigenstates embedded into an otherwise thermal spectrum. This novel non-thermal behaviour has been seen in recent experiments simulating a one-dimensional PXP model with a kinetically-constrained local Hilbert space realised by a chain of Rydberg atoms. We probe these small sets of special eigenstates starting from particular initial states by computing the spread complexity associated to time evolution of the PXP hamiltonian. Since the scar subspace in this model is embedded only loosely, the scar states form a weakly broken representation of the Lie algebra. We demonstrate why a careful usage of the forward scattering approximation (FSA), instead of any other method, is required to extract the most appropriate set of Lanczos coefficients in this case as the consequence of this approximate symmetry. Only such a method leads to a well defined notion of a closed Krylov subspace and consequently, that of spread complexity. We show this using three separate initial states, namely | Z 2 ⟩ , | Z 3 ⟩ and the vacuum state, due to the disparate classes of scar states hosted by these sectors. We also discuss systematic methods of remedying the imperfections in the FSA setup stemming from these approximate symmetries.

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Nandy, S., Mukherjee, B., Bhattacharyya, A., & Banerjee, A. (2024). Quantum state complexity meets many-body scars. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 36(15). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-648X/ad1a7b

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