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Exceptional Bound States and Negative Entanglement Entropy

Ching Hua Lee

2022Physical Review Letters76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This Letter introduces a new class of robust states known as exceptional bound (EB) states, which are distinct from the well-known topological and non-Hermitian skin boundary states. EB states occur in the presence of exceptional points, which are non-Hermitian critical points where eigenstates coalesce and fail to span the Hilbert space. This eigenspace defectiveness not only limits the accessibility of state information but also interplays with long-range order to give rise to singular propagators only possible in non-Hermitian settings. Their resultant EB eigenstates are characterized by robust anomalously large or negative occupation probabilities, unlike ordinary Fermi sea states whose probabilities lie between 0 and 1. EB states remain robust after a variety of quantum quenches and give rise to enigmatic negative entanglement entropy contributions. Through suitable perturbations, the coefficient of the logarithmic entanglement entropy scaling can be continuously tuned. EB states represent a new avenue for robustness arising from geometric defectiveness, independent of topological protection or nonreciprocal pumping.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum entanglementPhysicsHermitian matrixEigenvalues and eigenvectorsQuantum mechanicsHilbert spaceBound stateQuantum statePropagatorEntropy (arrow of time)Upper and lower boundsQuantumMathematical physicsMathematicsMathematical analysisQuantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian PhysicsTopological Materials and PhenomenaQuantum many-body systems