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Ben T. McDonough, Chao Yin, Andrew Lucas, Carolyn Zhang (Feb 06 2025).
Abstract: Lieb-Robinson bounds demonstrate the emergence of locality in many-body quantum systems. Intuitively, Lieb-Robinson bounds state that with local or exponentially decaying interactions, the correlation that can be built up between two sites separated by distance rr after a time tt decays as exp(vtr)\exp(vt-r), where vv is the emergent Lieb-Robinson velocity. In many problems, it is important to also capture how much of an operator grows to act on rdr^d sites in dd spatial dimensions. Perturbation theory and cluster expansion methods suggest that at short times, these volume-filling operators are suppressed as exp(rd)\exp(-r^d) at short times. We confirm this intuition, showing that for r>vtr > vt, the volume-filling operator is suppressed by exp((rvt)d/(vt)d1)\exp(-(r-vt)^d/(vt)^{d-1}). This closes a conceptual and practical gap between the cluster expansion and the Lieb-Robinson bound. We then present two very different applications of this new bound. Firstly, we obtain improved bounds on the classical computational resources necessary to simulate many-body dynamics with error tolerance ϵ\epsilon for any finite time tt: as ϵ\epsilon becomes sufficiently small, only ϵO(td1)\epsilon^{-O(t^{d-1})} resources are needed. A protocol that likely saturates this bound is given. Secondly, we prove that disorder operators have volume-law suppression near the "solvable (Ising) point" in quantum phases with spontaneous symmetry breaking, which implies a new diagnostic for distinguishing many-body phases of quantum matter.

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