Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws

We consider a clean quantum system subject to strong periodic driving. The existence of a dominant energy scale, h_{D}^{x}, can generate considerable structure in an effective description of a system that, in the absence of the drive, is nonintegrable and interacting, and does not host localization....

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Main Authors: Asmi Haldar, Diptiman Sen, Roderich Moessner, Arnab Das
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2021-04-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.021008
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spelling doaj-7ce01ffedac342a3a40e692271fe054c2021-04-07T14:09:37ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082021-04-0111202100810.1103/PhysRevX.11.021008Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation LawsAsmi HaldarDiptiman SenRoderich MoessnerArnab DasWe consider a clean quantum system subject to strong periodic driving. The existence of a dominant energy scale, h_{D}^{x}, can generate considerable structure in an effective description of a system that, in the absence of the drive, is nonintegrable and interacting, and does not host localization. In particular, we uncover points of freezing in the space of drive parameters (frequency and amplitude). At those points, the dynamics is severely constrained due to the emergence of an almost exact, local conserved quantity, which scars the entire Floquet spectrum by preventing the system from heating up ergodically, starting from any generic state, even though it delocalizes over an appropriate subspace. At large drive frequencies, where a naïve Magnus expansion would predict a vanishing effective (average) drive, we devise instead a strong-drive Magnus expansion in a moving frame. There, the emergent conservation law is reflected in the appearance of the “integrability” of an effective Hamiltonian. These results hold for a wide variety of Hamiltonians, including the Ising model in a transverse field in any dimension and for any form of Ising interaction. The phenomenon is also shown to be robust in the presence of two-body Heisenberg interactions with any arbitrary choice of couplings. Furthermore, we construct a real-time perturbation theory that captures resonance phenomena where the conservation breaks down, giving way to unbounded heating. This approach opens a window on the low-frequency regime where the Magnus expansion fails.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.021008
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Asmi Haldar
Diptiman Sen
Roderich Moessner
Arnab Das
spellingShingle Asmi Haldar
Diptiman Sen
Roderich Moessner
Arnab Das
Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
Physical Review X
author_facet Asmi Haldar
Diptiman Sen
Roderich Moessner
Arnab Das
author_sort Asmi Haldar
title Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
title_short Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
title_full Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
title_fullStr Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
title_full_unstemmed Dynamical Freezing and Scar Points in Strongly Driven Floquet Matter: Resonance vs Emergent Conservation Laws
title_sort dynamical freezing and scar points in strongly driven floquet matter: resonance vs emergent conservation laws
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2021-04-01
description We consider a clean quantum system subject to strong periodic driving. The existence of a dominant energy scale, h_{D}^{x}, can generate considerable structure in an effective description of a system that, in the absence of the drive, is nonintegrable and interacting, and does not host localization. In particular, we uncover points of freezing in the space of drive parameters (frequency and amplitude). At those points, the dynamics is severely constrained due to the emergence of an almost exact, local conserved quantity, which scars the entire Floquet spectrum by preventing the system from heating up ergodically, starting from any generic state, even though it delocalizes over an appropriate subspace. At large drive frequencies, where a naïve Magnus expansion would predict a vanishing effective (average) drive, we devise instead a strong-drive Magnus expansion in a moving frame. There, the emergent conservation law is reflected in the appearance of the “integrability” of an effective Hamiltonian. These results hold for a wide variety of Hamiltonians, including the Ising model in a transverse field in any dimension and for any form of Ising interaction. The phenomenon is also shown to be robust in the presence of two-body Heisenberg interactions with any arbitrary choice of couplings. Furthermore, we construct a real-time perturbation theory that captures resonance phenomena where the conservation breaks down, giving way to unbounded heating. This approach opens a window on the low-frequency regime where the Magnus expansion fails.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.021008
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