Why the dissipative gap fails to predict relaxation times in dissipative lattice models
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum systems exhibiting effective non-Hermitian dynamics are the subject of considerable recent interest. Among their most striking features is the non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE), where a small change in boundary conditions can completely change the spectrum and localization of eigenmodes. Recent work suggests that the NHSE directly also yields surprising dynamics: anomalously long relaxation times that are not simply given by the dissipative gap of the system's Liouvillian, but instead grow with system size and depend on the NHSE localization length ξloc. Despite the simplicity of the underlying argument, we show here that the situation is often more complex: a subtle interference effect makes the extreme localization of modes largely irrelevant in determining relaxation times. Focusing on a fully quantum open-systems implementation of the paradigmatic Hatano-Nelson model [1], we show why this intuitive interference effect must occur, how it helps determine anomalous relaxation times, and how this physics is ultimately a consequence of locality. We also show that there is a crucial sensitivity to particle statistics (i.e. fermionic versus bosonic models), and that similar effects occur in other non-Hermitian quantum lattice models.
[1] A. McDonald, R. Hanai, and A. A. Clerk, Phys. Rev. B 105, 064302 (2022)
[1] A. McDonald, R. Hanai, and A. A. Clerk, Phys. Rev. B 105, 064302 (2022)
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Presenters
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Gideon Lee
University of Chicago
Authors
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Gideon Lee
University of Chicago
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Alexander McDonald
University of Chicago, Université de Sherbrooke
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Aashish A Clerk
University of Chicago