Hard-core boson two-body models with random interactions exhibit chaotic spectral statistics, operator growth, and eigenstate properties approaching those of random matrices and the SYK model.
Localization of interacting fermions at high temperature
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We suggest that if a localized phase at nonzero temperature $T>0$ exists for strongly disordered and weakly interacting electrons, as recently argued, it will also occur when both disorder and interactions are strong and $T$ is very high. We show that in this high-$T$ regime the localization transition may be studied numerically through exact diagonalization of small systems. We obtain spectra for one-dimensional lattice models of interacting spinless fermions in a random potential. As expected, the spectral statistics of finite-size samples cross over from those of orthogonal random matrices in the diffusive regime at weak random potential to Poisson statistics in the localized regime at strong randomness. However, these data show deviations from simple one-parameter finite-size scaling: the apparent mobility edge ``drifts'' as the system's size is increased. Based on spectral statistics alone, we have thus been unable to make a strong numerical case for the presence of a many-body localized phase at nonzero $T$.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2roles
background 1polarities
background 1representative citing papers
Review of random matrix theory application to quantum chaos, covering symmetry classes, eigenvalue statistics, unfolding, and correlation functions.
citing papers explorer
-
Complexity of Quadratic Quantum Chaos
Hard-core boson two-body models with random interactions exhibit chaotic spectral statistics, operator growth, and eigenstate properties approaching those of random matrices and the SYK model.
-
Quantum chaotic systems: a random-matrix approach
Review of random matrix theory application to quantum chaos, covering symmetry classes, eigenvalue statistics, unfolding, and correlation functions.