Generalized symmetries generate exponentially many Krylov sectors in quantum many-body systems, showing that Hilbert space fragmentation does not by itself imply ergodicity breaking.
Quantum Fragmentation
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abstract
We introduce a systematic protocol for constructing quantum Hilbert-space-fragmented Hamiltonians, whose Krylov-sector structure, unlike in classically fragmented models, can be fully resolved only in an entangled basis. The protocol takes as input a classically fragmented model and uses a Rokhsar-Kivelson type construction to promote it to a quantum fragmented model. Notably, the procedure also works with non-fragmented inputs (such as Ising models). We explain how the Krylov sectors of the resulting quantum fragmented model may be labeled and counted in one dimension, and outline experimentally accessible verification of quantum fragmentation, assuming the ability to prepare specific initial states and perform tomography on reduced density matrices. We further analyze the entanglement structure of the entangled basis underlying quantum fragmentation, which sharply distinguishes it from both classical fragmentation and the trivial "fragmentation" of generic Hamiltonians in their eigenbasis. We also extend the construction to higher dimensions, with an explicit proof of principle example in two dimensions. We expect these results to open a new route to the systematic exploration of quantum fragmentation.
years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Rank deficiency of local Hamiltonians in classically fragmented models generates entangled frozen states, splitting mobile sectors into quantum Krylov subspaces and frozen entangled parts, with weak and strong quantum fragmentation distinguished by the number and ergodicity of irreducible blocks.
citing papers explorer
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Hilbert Space Fragmentation from Generalized Symmetries
Generalized symmetries generate exponentially many Krylov sectors in quantum many-body systems, showing that Hilbert space fragmentation does not by itself imply ergodicity breaking.
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Quantum Hilbert Space Fragmentation and Entangled Frozen States
Rank deficiency of local Hamiltonians in classically fragmented models generates entangled frozen states, splitting mobile sectors into quantum Krylov subspaces and frozen entangled parts, with weak and strong quantum fragmentation distinguished by the number and ergodicity of irreducible blocks.