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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.

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