Topological delocalization in the completely disordered two-dimensional
quantum walk
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.00203v3
- Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2021 06:21:59 GMT
- Title: Topological delocalization in the completely disordered two-dimensional
quantum walk
- Authors: J\'anos K. Asb\'oth, Arindam Mallick
- Abstract summary: We investigate the effect of spatial disorder on two-dimensional split-step discrete-time quantum walks with two internal "coin" states.
We find that spatial disorder of the most general type, i.e., position-dependent Haar random coin operators, does not lead to Anderson localization but to a diffusive spread instead.
This is a delocalization, which happens because disorder places the quantum walk to a critical point between different anomalous Floquet-Anderson insulating topological phases.
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- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We investigate numerically and theoretically the effect of spatial disorder
on two-dimensional split-step discrete-time quantum walks with two internal
"coin" states. Spatial disorder can lead to Anderson localization, inhibiting
the spread of quantum walks, putting them at a disadvantage against their
diffusively spreading classical counterparts. We find that spatial disorder of
the most general type, i.e., position-dependent Haar random coin operators,
does not lead to Anderson localization but to a diffusive spread instead. This
is a delocalization, which happens because disorder places the quantum walk to
a critical point between different anomalous Floquet-Anderson insulating
topological phases. We base this explanation on the relationship of this
general quantum walk to a simpler case more studied in the literature and for
which disorder-induced delocalization of a topological origin has been
observed. We review topological delocalization for the simpler quantum walk,
using time evolution of the wave functions and level spacing statistics. We
apply scattering theory to two-dimensional quantum walks and thus calculate the
topological invariants of disordered quantum walks, substantiating the
topological interpretation of the delocalization and finding signatures of the
delocalization in the finite-size scaling of transmission. We show criticality
of the Haar random quantum walk by calculating the critical exponent $\eta$ in
three different ways and find $\eta$ $\approx$ 0.52 as in the integer quantum
Hall effect. Our results showcase how theoretical ideas and numerical tools
from solid-state physics can help us understand spatially random quantum walks.
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