Many-body Localisation
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Many-body localization (MBL) is a dynamical phenomenon occurring in isolated
many-body The many-body problem is a general name for a vast category of physical problems pertaining to the properties of microscopic systems made of many interacting particles. ''Microscopic'' here implies that quantum mechanics has to be used to provid ...
quantum systems. It is characterized by the system failing to reach thermal equilibrium, and retaining a memory of its initial condition in local observables for infinite times.


Thermalization and localization

Textbook
quantum statistical mechanics Quantum statistical mechanics is statistical mechanics applied to quantum mechanical systems. In quantum mechanics a statistical ensemble (probability distribution over possible quantum states) is described by a density operator ''S'', which is a ...
assumes that systems go to thermal equilibrium (
thermalization In physics, thermalisation is the process of physical bodies reaching thermal equilibrium through mutual interaction. In general the natural tendency of a system is towards a state of equipartition of energy and uniform temperature that maximizes ...
). The process of thermalization erases local memory of the initial conditions. In textbooks, thermalization is ensured by coupling the system to an external environment or "reservoir," with which the system can exchange energy. What happens if the system is isolated from the environment, and evolves according to its own
Schrödinger equation The Schrödinger equation is a linear partial differential equation that governs the wave function of a quantum-mechanical system. It is a key result in quantum mechanics, and its discovery was a significant landmark in the development of the ...
? Does the system still thermalize? Quantum mechanical time evolution is unitary and formally preserves all information about the initial condition in the quantum state at all times. However, a quantum system generically contains a macroscopic number of degrees of freedom, but can only be probed through few-body measurements which are local in real space. The meaningful question then becomes whether accessible local measurements display thermalization. This question can be formalized by considering the quantum mechanical density matrix of the system. If the system is divided into a subregion (the region being probed) and its complement (everything else), then all information that can be extracted by measurements made on alone is encoded in the reduced density matrix \rho_A=\operatorname_B\rho(t). If, in the long time limit, \rho_A(t) approaches a thermal density matrix at a temperature set by the energy density in the state, then the system has "thermalized," and no local information about the initial condition can be extracted from local measurements. This process of "quantum thermalization" may be understood in terms of acting as a reservoir for . In this perspective, the entanglement entropy S=-\operatorname(\rho_A \log \rho_A) of a thermalizing system in a pure state plays the role of thermal entropy. Thermalizing systems therefore generically have extensive or "volume law" entanglement entropy at any non-zero temperature. They also generically obey the
eigenstate thermalization hypothesis The eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (or ETH) is a set of ideas which purports to explain when and why an isolated Quantum mechanics, quantum mechanical system can be accurately described using equilibrium statistical mechanics. In particular ...
(ETH). In contrast, if \rho_A(T) fails to approach a thermal density matrix even in the long time limit, and remains instead close to its initial condition \rho_A(0), then the system retains forever a memory of its initial condition in local observables. This latter possibility is referred to as "many body localization," and involves failing to act as a reservoir for . A system in a many body localized phase exhibits MBL, and continues to exhibit MBL even when subject to arbitrary local perturbations. Eigenstates of systems exhibiting MBL do not obey the ETH, and generically follow an "area law" for entanglement entropy (i.e. the entanglement entropy scales with the surface area of subregion ). A brief list of properties differentiating thermalizing and MBL systems is provided below. * In thermalizing systems, a memory of initial conditions is not accessible in local observables at long times. In MBL systems, memory of initial conditions remains accessible in local observables at long times. * In thermalizing systems, energy eigenstates obey ETH. In MBL systems, energy eigenstates do not obey ETH. * In thermalizing systems, energy eigenstates have volume law entanglement entropy. In MBL systems, energy eigenstates have area law entanglement entropy. * Thermalizing systems generically have non-zero thermal conductivity. MBL systems have zero thermal conductivity. * Thermalizing systems have continuous local spectra. MBL systems have discrete local spectra. * In thermalizing systems, entanglement entropy grows as a power law in time starting from low entanglement initial conditions. In MBL systems, entanglement entropy grows logarithmically in time starting from low entanglement initial conditions. * In thermalizing systems, the dynamics of out-of-time-ordered correlators forms a linear light cone which reflects the ballistic propagation of information. In MBL systems, the light cone is logarithmic.


History

MBL was first proposed by P.W. Anderson in 1958 as a possibility that could arise in strongly disordered quantum systems. The basic idea was that if particles all live in a random energy landscape, then any rearrangement of particles would change the energy of the system. Since energy is a conserved quantity in quantum mechanics, such a process can only be virtual and cannot lead to any transport of particle number or energy. While localization for single particle systems was demonstrated already in Anderson's original paper (coming to be known as
Anderson localization In condensed matter physics, Anderson localization (also known as strong localization) is the absence of diffusion of waves in a ''disordered'' medium. This phenomenon is named after the American physicist P. W. Anderson, who was the first to sug ...
), the existence of the phenomenon for many particle systems remained a conjecture for decades. In 1980 Fleishman and Anderson demonstrated the phenomenon survived the addition of interactions to lowest order in
perturbation theory In mathematics and applied mathematics, perturbation theory comprises methods for finding an approximate solution to a problem, by starting from the exact solution of a related, simpler problem. A critical feature of the technique is a middle ...
. In a 1998 study, the analysis was extended to all orders in perturbation theory, in a
zero-dimensional system In mathematics, a zero-dimensional topological space (or nildimensional space) is a topological space that has dimension zero with respect to one of several inequivalent notions of assigning a dimension to a given topological space. A graphical i ...
, and the MBL phenomenon was shown to survive. In 2005 and 2006, this was extended to high orders in perturbation theory in high dimensional systems. MBL was argued to survive at least at low energy density. A series of numerical works provided further evidence for the phenomenon in one dimensional systems, at all energy densities (“infinite temperature”). Finally, in 2014 Imbrie presented a proof of MBL for certain one dimensional spin chains with strong disorder, with the localization being stable to arbitrary local perturbations – i.e. the systems were shown to be in a many body localized phase. It is now believed that MBL can arise also in periodically driven "Floquet" systems where energy is conserved only modulo the drive frequency.


Emergent integrability

Many body localized systems exhibit a phenomenon known as emergent integrability. In a non-interacting Anderson insulator, the occupation number of each localized single particle orbital is separately a local integral of motion. It was conjectured (and proven by Imbrie) that a similar extensive set of local integrals of motion should also exist in the MBL phase. Consider for specificity a one dimensional spin-1/2 chain with Hamiltonian :H=\sum_i \left J \left ( X_i X_ + Y_i Y_ \right ) + J^\prime Z_i Z_ + h_i Z_i \right where , and are Pauli operators, and are random variables drawn from a distribution of some width . When the disorder is strong enough () that all eigenstates are localized, then there exists a local unitary transformation to new variables such that :H=\sum_i h^\prime_i \tau^z_i + \sum_ J_ \tau^z_i \tau^z_j + \sum_ K_ \tau^z_i \tau^z_j \tau^z_k + \cdots, where are Pauli operators that are related to the physical Pauli operators by a local unitary transformation, the … indicates additional terms which only involve operators, and the coefficients fall off exponentially with distance. This Hamiltonian manifestly contains an extensive number of localized integrals of motion or "l-bits" (the operators , which all commute with the Hamiltonian). If the original Hamiltonian is perturbed, the l-bits get redefined, but the integrable structure survives.


Exotic orders

MBL enables the formation of exotic forms of quantum order that could not arise in thermal equilibrium, through the phenomenon of
localization-protected quantum order Many-body localization (MBL) is a dynamical phenomenon which leads to the breakdown of equilibrium statistical mechanics in isolated many-body systems. Such systems never reach local thermal equilibrium, and retain local memory of their initial cond ...
. A form of localization-protected quantum order, arising only in periodically driven systems, is the Floquet
time crystal In condensed matter physics, a time crystal is a quantum system of particles whose lowest-energy state is one in which the particles are in repetitive motion. The system cannot lose energy to the environment and come to rest because it is alre ...
.


Experimental realizations

A number of experiments have been reported observing the MBL phenomenon. Most of these experiments involve synthetic quantum systems, such as assemblies of
ultracold atoms Ultracold atoms are atoms that are maintained at temperatures close to 0 kelvin (absolute zero), typically below several tens of microkelvin (µK). At these temperatures the atom's quantum-mechanical properties become important. To reach such low ...
or trapped ions. Experimental explorations of the phenomenon in solid state systems are still in their infancy.


See also

*
Quantum scar Quantum scarring refers to a phenomenon where the eigenstates of a classically chaotic quantum system have enhanced probability density around the paths of unstable classical periodic orbits. The instability of the periodic orbit is a decisive poi ...
*
Thermalization In physics, thermalisation is the process of physical bodies reaching thermal equilibrium through mutual interaction. In general the natural tendency of a system is towards a state of equipartition of energy and uniform temperature that maximizes ...
*
Time crystal In condensed matter physics, a time crystal is a quantum system of particles whose lowest-energy state is one in which the particles are in repetitive motion. The system cannot lose energy to the environment and come to rest because it is alre ...


References

{{ref list Quantum mechanics Quantum chaos theory