4.6 Article

Rainbow scars: From area to volume law

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 105, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.105.L060301

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. AFOSR
  2. AFOSR MURI
  3. DoE ASCR Quantum Testbed Pathfinder program [DE-SC0019040]
  4. NSF QLCI [OMA-2120757]
  5. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0019449]
  6. DoE ASCR Accelerated Research in Quantum Computing program [DE-SC0020312]
  7. ARO MURI
  8. DARPA SAVaNT ADVENT
  9. National Science Foundation [PHY-1607611, NSF PHY-1748958]
  10. DoE QSA

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This study develops a generic construction that embeds a new class of quantum many-body scars, called rainbow scars, into the spectrum of an arbitrary Hamiltonian. Unlike other examples of quantum many-body scars, rainbow scars display extensive bipartite entanglement entropy and can occur multiple times or even throughout the spectrum in the presence of internal symmetries.
Quantum many-body scars (QMBS) constitute a new quantum dynamical regime in which rare scarred eigenstates mediate weak ergodicity breaking. One open question is to understand the most general setting in which these states arise. In this work, we develop a generic construction that embeds a new class of QMBS, rainbow scars, into the spectrum of an arbitrary Hamiltonian. Unlike other examples of QMBS, rainbow scars display extensive bipartite entanglement entropy while retaining a simple entanglement structure. Specifically, the entanglement scaling is volume-law for a random bipartition, while scaling for a fine-tuned bipartition is subextensive. When internal symmetries are present, the construction leads to multiple, and even towers, of rainbow scars revealed through distinctive non-thermal dynamics. Remarkably, certain symmetries can lead rainbow scars to arise in translation-invariant models. To this end, we provide an experimental road map for realizing rainbow scar states in a Rydberg-atom quantum simulator, leading to coherent oscillations distinct from the strictly sub-volume-law QMBS previously realized in the same system.

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