Spatial deformation of many-body quantum chaotic systems and quantum information scrambling

ORAL

Abstract

We study the effect of spatial inhomogeneity on quantum information scrambling, a process of spreading and locally hiding quantum information in quantum many-body systems. As a paradigmatic example, we consider the quantum chaotic Ising spin chain and its inhomogeneous counterpart that is obtained by modulating the Hamiltonian density. Specifically, we consider the so-called Möbius and sine-square deformations that were previously studied in the context of (1+1)-dimensional conformal field theories (1+1 d CFTs). In the spatial region where the modulated energy density is small, these deformations prevent the spreading of quantum information while in the region where the modulated energy density is large quantum information scrambling is accelerated. This suggests that we can control the scrambling and butterfly effect by spatially modulating the Hamiltonian density. We also found that the time dependence of energy density exhibits the signature of black-hole-like excitation found in the 1+1 d CFTs even in the chaotic spin chain.

* K.G. is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant-in-Aid for Early-Career Scientists (21K13930) and Research Fellowships of Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for Young Scientists (22J00663). M.N. is supported by funds from the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (UCAS), and funds from the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Sciences (KITS). K.T. is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant No. 21K13920 and MEXT KAKENHI Grant No. 22H05265. S.R. is supported by the National Science Foundation under Award No. DMR-2001181, and by a Simons Investigator Grant from the Simons Foundation (Award No. 566116). This work is supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through Grant GBMF8685 toward the Princeton theory program.

Publication: arXiv:2305.01019

Presenters

  • Taozhi Guo

    Princeton University

Authors

  • Taozhi Guo

    Princeton University

  • Kanato Goto

    RIKEN

  • Tomoki Nosaka

    Kavli Institute for Theoretical Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Masahiro Nozaki

    Kavli Institute for Theoretical Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Shinsei Ryu

    Princeton University

  • Kotaro Tamaoka

    Nihon University, Department of Physics, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University