Strictly linear light cones in long-range interacting systems of arbitrary dimensions (1910.14477v4)
Abstract: In locally interacting quantum many-body systems, the velocity of information propagation is finitely bounded and a linear light cone can be defined. Outside the light cone, the amount of information rapidly decays with distance. When systems have long-range interactions, it is highly nontrivial whether such a linear light cone exists. Herein, we consider generic long-range interacting systems with decaying interactions, such as $R{-\alpha}$ with distance $R$. We prove the existence of the linear light cone for $\alpha>2D+1$ ($D$: the spatial dimension), where we obtain the Lieb--Robinson bound as $|[O_i(t),O_j]|\lesssim{t}{2D+1}(R-\bar{v}t){-\alpha}$ with $\bar{v}=\mathcal{O}(1)$ for two arbitrary operators $O_i$ and $O_j$ separated by a distance $R$. Moreover, we provide an explicit quantum-state transfer protocol that achieves the above bound up to a constant coefficient and violates the linear light cone for $\alpha<2D+1$. In the regime of $\alpha>2D+1$, our result characterizes the best general constraints on the information spreading.
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