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Agenda

 

 

Séminaire Théorie : vendredi 19 janvier 2024 à 11h00

Claudia Artiaco (KTH Royal Institute of Technology,)

Titre : The time evolution of local information

 
LPMMC, Salle G421

 

Résumé : During the time evolution of many-body systems entanglement spreads rapidly, limiting exact simulations to small-scale systems or small timescales. Quantum information tends, however, to flow towards larger scales without returning to local scales, such that its detailed large-scale structure does not directly affect local observables. This allows for the removal of large-scale quantum information in a way that preserves all local observables and gives access to large-scale and large-time quantum dynamics. To this end, we use the recently introduced information lattice to organize quantum information into different scales, allowing us to define local information and information currents which we employ to systematically discard long-range quantum correlations in a controlled way. Our approach relies on decomposing the system into subsystems up to a maximum scale and time evolving the subsystem density matrices by solving the subsystem von Neumann equations in parallel. Importantly, the information flow needs to be preserved during the discarding of large- scale information. To achieve this without the need to make assumptions about the microscopic details of the information current, we introduce a second scale at which information is discarded while using the state at the maximum scale to accurately obtain the information flow. The resulting algorithm, which we call local-information time evolution (LITE), is highly versatile and suitable for investigating many-body quantum dynamics in both closed and open quantum systems with diverse hydrodynamic behaviors. In this talk, I will present results for the energy transport in the mixed-field Ising model, where we accurately determine the power-law exponent and the energy diffusion constant. Furthermore, I will sketch how we used the LITE approach to reproduce and interpret the results found in a recent experiment with NV centers in diamonds. Finally, I will briefly mention how the information lattice can be employed to obtain insightful results about the spatial structure of entanglement in generic many-body quantum states.
References:
[1] T. Klein-Kvorning, L. Herviou, and J. H. Bardarson, Time-evolution of local information: Thermalization dynamics of local observables, SciPost Phys. 13, 080 (2022).
[2] C. Artiaco, C. Fleckenstein, D. Aceituno, T. Klein-Kvorning, and J. H. Bardarson, Efficient Large-Scale Many- Body Quantum Dynamics via Local-Information Time Evolution, arXiv:2310:06036.
[3] K. Harkins et al., Nanoscale engineering and dynamical stabilization of mesoscopic spin textures, arXiv:2310:05635.