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AbstractAbstract
[en] To understand the finite-size-scaling properties of phases transitions in classical and quantum models in the presence of quenched disorder, it has proven to be fruitful to introduce the notion of a finite-size-pseudo-critical point in each disordered sample and to analyze its sample-to-sample fluctuations as a function of the size. For the many-body-localization transition, where very strong eigenstate-to-eigenstate fluctuations have been numerically reported even within a given disordered sample at a given energy density (Yu, Luitz and Clark 2016 arXiv:1606.01260 and Khemani, Lim, Sheng and Huse 2016 arXiv:1607.05756), it seems thus useful to introduce the notion of a finite-size-pseudo-critical point for each individual eigenstate and to study its eigenstate-to-eigenstate fluctuations governed by the correlation length exponent ν . The scaling properties of critical eigenstates are also expected to appear much more clearly if one considers each eigenstate at its finite-size-pseudo-critical point, where it is ‘truly critical’, while standard averages over eigenstates and samples in the critical region actually see a mixture of states that are effectively either localized or delocalized. (paper: disordered systems, classical and quantum)
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Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-5468/aa50db; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Statistical Mechanics; ISSN 1742-5468;
; v. 2016(12); [24 p.]

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