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Many-body localization is characterized by a slow logarithmic growth of the entanglement entropy after a global quantum quench while the local memory of an initial density imbalance remains at infinite time. We investigate how much the proximity of a many-body localized phase can influence the dynamics in the delocalized ergodic regime where thermalization is expected. Using an exact Krylov space technique, the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of the random-field Heisenberg chain is studied up to L=28 sites, starting from an initially unentangled high-energy product state. Within most of the delocalized phase, we find a sub-ballistic entanglement growth S (t) t^1/z with a disorder-dependent exponent z1, in contrast with the pure ballistic growth z=1 of clean systems. At the same time, anomalous relaxation is also observed for the spin imbalance I (t) t^- with a continuously varying disorder-dependent exponent, vanishing at the transition. This provides a clear experimental signature for detecting this nonconventional regime.
Luitz et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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