Glassy Word Problems: Ultraslow Relaxation, Hilbert Space Jamming, and Computational Complexity

Author:

Balasubramanian Shankar123,Gopalakrishnan Sarang4,Khudorozhkov Alexey5ORCID,Lake Ethan16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

2. Center for Theoretical Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

3. Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA

4. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

5. Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA

6. Department of Physics, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

Abstract

We introduce a family of local models of dynamics based on “word problems” from computer science and group theory, for which we can place rigorous lower bounds on relaxation timescales. These models can be regarded either as random circuit or local Hamiltonian dynamics and include many familiar examples of constrained dynamics as special cases. The configuration space of these models splits into dynamically disconnected sectors, and for initial states to relax, they must “work out” the other states in the sector to which they belong. When this problem has a high time complexity, relaxation is slow. In some of the cases we study, this problem also has high space complexity. When the space complexity is larger than the system size, an unconventional type of jamming transition can occur, whereby a system of a fixed size is not ergodic but can be made ergodic by appending a large reservoir of sites in a trivial product state. This finding manifests itself in a new type of Hilbert space fragmentation that we call fragile fragmentation. We present explicit examples where slow relaxation and jamming strongly modify the hydrodynamics of conserved densities. In one example, density modulations of wave vector q exhibit almost no relaxation until times O(exp(1/q)), at which point they abruptly collapse. We also comment on extensions of our results to higher dimensions. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Funder

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

Boston University

Heising-Simons Foundation

Simons Foundation

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

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