TY - JOUR
T1 - Many-Body Non-Hermitian Skin Effect for Multipoles
AU - Gliozzi, Jacopo
AU - De Tomasi, Giuseppe
AU - Hughes, Taylor L.
N1 - G.\u2009D.\u2009T. acknowledges the support from the EPiQS Program of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. T.\u2009L.\u2009H. and J.\u2009G. acknowledge support from the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR) Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) under Grant No. N00014-20-1-2325 on Robust Photonic Materials with Higher-Order Topological Protection. G.\u2009D.\u2009T. acknowledges the hospitality of MPIPKS Dresden where part of the work was done.
PY - 2024/9/27
Y1 - 2024/9/27
N2 - In this Letter, we investigate the fate of the non-Hermitian skin effect in one-dimensional systems that conserve the dipole moment and higher moments of an associated global U(1) charge. Motivated by field theoretical arguments and lattice model calculations, we demonstrate that the key feature of the non-Hermitian skin effect for m-pole conserving systems is the generation of an (m+1)th multipole moment. For example, in contrast to the conventional skin effect where charges are anomalously localized at one boundary, the dipole-conserving skin effect results in charges localized at both boundaries, in a configuration that generates an extremal quadrupole moment. In addition, we explore the dynamical consequences of the m-pole skin effect, focusing on charge and entanglement propagation. Both numerically and analytically, we provide evidence that long-time steady states have Fock-space localization and an area-law scaling of entanglement entropy, which serve as quantum indicators of the skin effect.
AB - In this Letter, we investigate the fate of the non-Hermitian skin effect in one-dimensional systems that conserve the dipole moment and higher moments of an associated global U(1) charge. Motivated by field theoretical arguments and lattice model calculations, we demonstrate that the key feature of the non-Hermitian skin effect for m-pole conserving systems is the generation of an (m+1)th multipole moment. For example, in contrast to the conventional skin effect where charges are anomalously localized at one boundary, the dipole-conserving skin effect results in charges localized at both boundaries, in a configuration that generates an extremal quadrupole moment. In addition, we explore the dynamical consequences of the m-pole skin effect, focusing on charge and entanglement propagation. Both numerically and analytically, we provide evidence that long-time steady states have Fock-space localization and an area-law scaling of entanglement entropy, which serve as quantum indicators of the skin effect.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.133.136503
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.133.136503
M3 - Article
C2 - 39392985
AN - SCOPUS:85204951731
SN - 0031-9007
VL - 133
JO - Physical review letters
JF - Physical review letters
IS - 13
M1 - 136503
ER -