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Persistent Ballistic Entanglement Spreading with Optimal Control in Quantum Spin Chains

Abstract

Entanglement propagation provides a key routine to understand quantum many-body dynamics in and out of equilibrium. In this work, we uncover that the ``variational entanglement-enhancing'' field (VEEF) robustly induces a persistent ballistic spreading of entanglement in quantum spin chains. The VEEF is time dependent, and is optimally controlled to maximize the bipartite entanglement entropy (EE) of the final state. Such a linear growth persists till the EE reaches the genuine saturation S~=log22N2=N2\tilde{S} = - \log_{2} 2^{-\frac{N}{2}}=\frac{N}{2} with NN the total number of spins. The EE satisfies S(t)=vtS(t) = v t for the time tN2vt \leq \frac{N}{2v}, with vv the velocity. These results are in sharp contrast with the behaviors without VEEF, where the EE generally approaches a sub-saturation known as the Page value S~P=S~12ln2\tilde{S}_{P} =\tilde{S} - \frac{1}{2\ln{2}} in the long-time limit, and the entanglement growth deviates from being linear before the Page value is reached. The dependence between the velocity and interactions is explored, with v2.76v \simeq 2.76, 4.984.98, and 5.755.75 for the spin chains with Ising, XY, and Heisenberg interactions, respectively. We further show that the nonlinear growth of EE emerges with the presence of long-range interactions.

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