4.8 Article

Probing entanglement in a many-body-localized system

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 364, Issue 6437, Pages 256-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aau0818

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundations EPiQS Initiative
  3. Air Force Office of Scientific Research MURI program
  4. Army Research Office MURI program
  5. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation
  7. Harvard Society of Fellows
  8. William F. Milton Fund

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An interacting quantum system that is subject to disorder may cease to thermalize owing to localization of its constituents, thereby marking the breakdown of thermodynamics. The key to understanding this phenomenon lies in the system's entanglement, which is experimentally challenging to measure. We realize such a many-body-localized system in a disordered Bose-Hubbard chain and characterize its entanglement properties through particle fluctuations and correlations. We observe that the particles become localized, suppressing transport and preventing the thermalization of subsystems. Notably, we measure the development of nonlocal correlations, whose evolution is consistent with a logarithmic growth of entanglement entropy, the hallmark of many-body localization. Our work experimentally establishes many-body localization as a qualitatively distinct phenomenon from localization in noninteracting, disordered systems.

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