Emergence of Hilbert Space Fragmentation in the Ising Model with a Weak Transverse Field
ORAL
Abstract
The last two decades have witnessed a substantial advance in revealing conditions for quantum many-body systems to thermalize following the experimental progress in quantum simulators. The transverse-field Ising model is one of the fundamental models in quantum many-body systems, yet full understanding of its dynamics remains elusive for higher than in one dimension. Here, we show the emergence of non-ergodicity for the Ising model in a weak transverse field on a square lattice in arbitrary dimension d. Specifically we investigate the effective non-integrable model in the weak-transverse field limit and demonstrate that novel Hilbert-space fragmentation occurs for d>1 as a consequence of only one emergent U(1) conservation law, i.e., domain-wall-number conservation. This conservation law leads to a kinetic constraint in the model and the appearance of frozen regions, which give rise to exponentially many fragmented subspaces in the Hilbert space. Our results indicate nontrivial initial-state dependence for long-lived prethermal dynamics of the Ising models in a weak transverse field.
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Presenters
Atsuki Yoshinaga
Department of Physics, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo
Authors
Atsuki Yoshinaga
Department of Physics, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo
Takashi Imoto
Research Center for Emerging Computing Technologies, National institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
Hideaki Hakoshima
Osaka University, Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Biology, Osaka University
Yuichiro Matsuzaki
AIST, Research Center for Emerging Computing Technologies, National institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Ryusuke Hamazaki
Nonequilibrium Quantum Statistical Mechanics RIKEN Hakubi Research Team, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research (CPR), RIKEN iTHEMS