Exceptional entanglement in non-Hermitian fermionic models

Abstract

Exotic singular objects, known as exceptional points, are ubiquitous in non-Hermitian physics. They might be spectral singularities in energy bands that produce anomalous effects and defectiveness. The quantum entanglement of a generic non-Hermitian model with two different types of spectral exceptional points (SEPs) is systematically investigated in this paper. We discovered a relationship between non-unitary conformal field theories and the k-linear-type SEPs, which is typically associated with PT-symmetry or pesdo-Hermicity spontaneous breaking. The underlying association between k-square-root-type SEPs, which arise concurrently with real (imaginary) gap closing in the complex spectrum, mimicking first-order-phase-transition criticalities, and complex conformal field theories (cCFTs) is addressed through the calculation of complex central charges. From the entanglement spectrum, zero-energy exceptional modes are found to be distinct from normal zero modes or topological boundary modes. Finally, we include a brief discussion of analogous non-Hermitian quantum spin models and endeavor to establish an intuitive understanding of exceptional points through the spin picture in various scenarios.

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