Abstract

The many-body localization transition in quasiperiodic systems has been extensively studied in recent ultracold atom experiments. At intermediate quasiperiodic potential strength, a surprising Griffiths-like regime with slow dynamics appears in the absence of random disorder and mobility edges. In this Rapid Communication, we study the interacting Aubry-Andre model, a prototype quasiperiodic system, as a function of incommensurate potential strength using a dynamical measure, information scrambling, in a large system of 200 lattice sites. Between the thermal phase and the many-body localized phase, we find an intermediate dynamical phase where the butterfly velocity is zero and information spreads in space as a power law in time. This is in contrast to the ballistic spreading in the thermal phase and logarithmic spreading in the localized phase. We further investigate the entanglement structure of the many-body eigenstates in the intermediate phase and find strong fluctuations in eigenstate entanglement entropy within a given energy window, which is inconsistent with the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis. Machine learning on the entanglement spectrum also reaches the same conclusion. Our large-scale simulations suggest that the intermediate phase with a vanishing butterfly velocity could be responsible for the slow dynamics seen in recent experiments.

Publication Details
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2019
Volume
1
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevResearch.1.032039
Journal
Physical Review Research
Contributors