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Strongly interacting fermions are non-trivial yet non-glassy

ORAL

Abstract

Random spin systems at low temperatures are glassy and feature computational hardness in finding low-energy states. We study the random all-to-all interacting fermionic Sachdev–Ye–Kitaev (SYK) model and prove that, in contrast, (I) the low-energy states have polynomial circuit depth, yet (II) the annealed and quenched free energies agree to inverse-polynomially low temperatures, ruling out a glassy phase transition in this sense. These results are derived by showing that fermionic and spin systems significantly differ in their commutation index, which quantifies the non-commutativity of Hamiltonian terms. Our results suggest that low-temperature strongly interacting fermions, unlike spins, belong in a classically nontrivial yet quantumly easy phase.

Publication: Anshuetz, Eric R., et al. "Strongly interacting fermions are non-trivial yet non-glassy." arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.15699 (2024).

Presenters

  • Robbie King

    Caltech

Authors

  • Robbie King

    Caltech

  • Chi-Fang Chen

    Caltech

  • Bobak Kiani

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Eric R Anschuetz

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT