24 research outputs found
Spread of entanglement in a Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev chain
We study the spread of R\'enyi entropy between two halves of a
Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) chain of Majorana fermions, prepared in a thermofield
double (TFD) state. The SYK chain model is a model of chaotic many-body
systems, which describes a one-dimensional lattice of Majorana fermions, with
spatially local random quartic interaction. We find that for integer R\'enyi
index , the R\'enyi entanglement entropy saturates at a parametrically
smaller value than expected. This implies that the TFD state of the SYK chain
does not rapidly thermalize, despite being maximally chaotic: instead, it
rapidly approaches a prethermal state. We compare our results to the signatures
of thermalization observed in other quenches in the SYK model, and to intuition
from nearly- gravity.Comment: 1+46 pages, 11 figure
Local criticality, diffusion and chaos in generalized Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev models
The Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model is a -dimensional model describing
Majorana fermions or complex fermions with random interactions. This model has
various interesting properties such as approximate local criticality (power law
correlation in time), zero temperature entropy, and quantum chaos. In this
article, we propose a higher dimensional generalization of the
Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model, which is a lattice model with Majorana fermions at
each site and random interactions between them. Our model can be defined on
arbitrary lattices in arbitrary spatial dimensions. In the large limit, the
higher dimensional model preserves many properties of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev
model such as local criticality in two-point functions, zero temperature
entropy and chaos measured by the out-of-time-ordered correlation functions. In
addition, we obtain new properties unique to higher dimensions such as
diffusive energy transport and a "butterfly velocity" describing the
propagation of chaos in space. We mainly present results for a
-dimensional example, and discuss the general case near the end.Comment: 1+37 pages, published versio
Population dynamics under demographic and environmental stochasticity
The present paper is devoted to the study of the long term dynamics of
diffusion processes modelling a single species that experiences both
demographic and environmental stochasticity. In our setting, the long term
dynamics of the diffusion process in the absence of demographic stochasticity
is determined by the sign of , the external Lyapunov exponent, as
follows:
implies convergence to a unique positive stationary distribution . If
the system is of size for small (the
intensity of demographic stochasticity), demographic effects will make the
extinction time finite almost surely. This suggests that to understand the
dynamics one should analyze the quasi-stationary distribution (QSD)
of the system. The existence and uniqueness of the QSD is
well-known under mild assumptions.
We look at what happens when the population size is sent to infinity, i.e.,
when . We show that the external Lyapunov exponent still plays a
key role: 1) If , then , the mean
extinction time is of order and the extinction rate associated
with the QSD has a lower bound of order
; 2) If , then ,
the mean extinction time is polynomial in and the
extinction rate is polynomial in . Furthermore, when
we are able to show that the system exhibits multiscale dynamics:
at first the process quickly approaches the QSD and then, after
spending a polynomially long time there, it relaxes to the extinction state. We
give sharp asymptotics in for the time spent close to
.Comment: 59 page
Holographic duality between -d quantum anomalous Hall state and -d topological insulators
In this paper, we study -dimensional quantum anomalous Hall states,
i.e. band insulators with quantized Hall conductance, using the exact
holographic mapping. The exact holographic mapping is an approach to
holographic duality which maps the quantum anomalous Hall state to a different
state living in -dimensional hyperbolic space. By studying topological
response properties and the entanglement spectrum, we demonstrate that the
holographic dual theory of a quantum anomalous Hall state is a
-dimensional topological insulator. The dual description enables a new
characterization of topological properties of a system by the quantum
entanglement between degrees of freedom at different length scales.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
ObjSim: Lightweight Automatic Patch Prioritization via Object Similarity
In the context of test case based automatic program repair (APR), patches
that pass all the test cases but fail to fix the bug are called overfitted
patches. Currently, patches generated by APR tools get inspected manually by
the users to find and adopt genuine fixes. Being a laborious activity hindering
widespread adoption of APR, automatic identification of overfitted patches has
lately been the topic of active research. This paper presents engineering
details of ObjSim: a fully automatic, lightweight similarity-based patch
prioritization tool for JVM-based languages. The tool works by comparing the
system state at the exit point(s) of patched method before and after patching
and prioritizing patches that result in state that is more similar to that of
original, unpatched version on passing tests while less similar on failing
ones. Our experiments with patches generated by the recent APR tool PraPR for
fixable bugs from Defects4J v1.4.0 show that ObjSim prioritizes 16.67% more
genuine fixes in top-1 place. A demo video of the tool is located at
https://bit.ly/2K8gnYV.Comment: Proceedings of the 29th ACM SIGSOFT International Symposium on
Software Testing and Analysis (ISSTA '20), July 18--22, 2020, Virtual Event,
US