At low temperature the low end of the QCD Dirac spectrum is well described by
chiral random matrix theory. In contrast, at high temperature there is no
similar statistical description of the spectrum. We show that at high
temperature the lowest part of the spectrum consists of a band of statistically
uncorrelated eigenvalues obeying essentially Poisson statistics and the
corresponding eigenvectors are extremely localized. Going up in the spectrum
the spectral density rapidly increases and the eigenvectors become more and
more delocalized. At the same time the spectral statistics gradually crosses
over to the bulk statistics expected from the corresponding random matrix
ensemble. This phenomenon is reminiscent of Anderson localization in disordered
conductors. Our findings are based on staggered Dirac spectra in quenched SU(2)
lattice simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure