Interactions and integrability in weakly monitored Hamiltonian systems
ORAL
Abstract
Interspersing unitary dynamics with local measurements results in measurement-induced phases and transitions in many-body quantum systems. When the evolution is driven by a local Hamiltonian, two types of transitions have been observed, characterized by an abrupt change in the system size scaling of entanglement entropy. The critical point separates the strongly monitored area-law phase from a volume law or a subextensive, typically logarithmiclike, one at low measurement rates. Identifying the key ingredients responsible for the entanglement scaling in the weakly monitored phase is the key purpose of this work. For this purpose, we consider prototypical one-dimensional spin chains with local monitoring featuring the presence/absence of U(1) symmetry, integrability, and interactions. Using exact numerical methods, the system sizes studied reveal that the presence of interaction is always correlated to a volume law weakly monitored phase. In contrast, noninteracting systems present subextensive scaling of entanglement. Other characteristics, namely integrability or U(1) symmetry, do not play a role in the character of the entanglement phase.
*D.P. acknowledges support from the Ministry of Education Singapore, under Grant MOE-T2EP50120-0019. We acknowledge computational resources on the College de France IPH cluster. X.T. and M.S. were supported by the ANR Grant "NonEQuMat" (ANR-19-CE47-0001). This work was supported by PNRR MUR Project PE0000023- NQSTI and by the European Union (ERC, RAVE, 101053159).
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Publication: Phys. Rev. B 109, L060302
Presenters
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Bo Xing
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology