52 research outputs found
Emergent Gravity of Fractons: Mach's Principle Revisited
Recent work has established the existence of stable quantum phases of matter
described by symmetric tensor gauge fields, which naturally couple to particles
of restricted mobility, such as fractons. We focus on a minimal toy model of a
rank 2 tensor gauge field, consisting of fractons coupled to an emergent
graviton (massless spin-2 excitation). We show how to reconcile the immobility
of fractons with the expected gravitational behavior of the model. First, we
reformulate the fracton phenomenon in terms of an emergent center of mass
quantum number, and we show how an effective attraction arises from the
principles of locality and conservation of center of mass. This interaction
between fractons is always attractive and can be recast in geometric language,
with a geodesic-like formulation, thereby satisfying the expected properties of
a gravitational force. This force will generically be short-ranged, but we
discuss how the power-law behavior of Newtonian gravity can arise under certain
conditions. We then show that, while an isolated fracton is immobile, fractons
are endowed with finite inertia by the presence of a large-scale distribution
of other fractons, in a concrete manifestation of Mach's principle. Our
formalism provides suggestive hints that matter plays a fundamental role, not
only in perturbing, but in creating the background space in which it
propagates.Comment: 12+4 page
Generalized Electromagnetism of Subdimensional Particles: A Spin Liquid Story
It has recently been shown that there exists a class of stable gapless spin
liquids in 3+1 dimensions described by higher rank tensor U(1) gauge fields,
giving rise to an emergent tensor electromagnetism. The tensor gauge field of
these theories couples naturally to subdimensional particles (such as
fractons), which are restricted by gauge invariance to move only along
lower-dimensional subspaces of the system. We here work out some of the basic
generalized electromagnetic properties of subdimensional particles coupled to
tensor electromagnetism, such as generalized electrostatic fields, potential
formulations, Lorentz forces, Maxwell equations, and Biot-Savart laws. Some
concepts from conventional electromagnetism will carry over directly, while
others require significant modification.Comment: 14+4 page
Finite-Temperature Screening of U(1) Fractons
We investigate the finite-temperature screening behavior of three-dimensional
U(1) spin liquid phases with fracton excitations. Several features are shared
with the conventional U(1) spin liquid. The system can exhibit spin liquid
physics over macroscopic length scales at low temperatures, but screening
effects eventually lead to a smooth finite-temperature crossover to a trivial
phase at sufficiently large distances. However, unlike more conventional U(1)
spin liquids, we find that complete low-temperature screening of fractons
requires not only very large distances, but also very long timescales. At the
longest timescales, a charged disturbance (fracton) will acquire a screening
cloud of other fractons, resulting in only short-range correlations in the
system. At intermediate timescales, on the other hand, a fracton can only be
partially screened by a cloud of mobile excitations, leaving weak power-law
correlations in the system. Such residual power-law correlations may be a
useful diagnostic in an experimental search for U(1) fracton phases.Comment: 8+2 page
Entanglement Entropy of U(1) Quantum Spin Liquids
We here investigate the entanglement structure of the ground state of a
(3+1)-dimensional U(1) quantum spin liquid, which is described by the
deconfined phase of a compact U(1) gauge theory. A gapless photon is the only
low-energy excitation, with matter existing as deconfined but gapped
excitations of the system. It is found that, for a given bipartition of the
system, the elements of the entanglement spectrum can be grouped according to
the electric flux between the two regions, leading to a useful interpretation
of the entanglement spectrum in terms of electric charges living on the
boundary. The entanglement spectrum is also given additional structure due to
the presence of the gapless photon. Making use of the Bisognano-Wichmann
theorem and a local thermal approximation, these two contributions to the
entanglement (particle and photon) are recast in terms of boundary and bulk
contributions, respectively. Both pieces of the entanglement structure give
rise to universal subleading terms (relative to the area law) in the
entanglement entropy, which are logarithmic in the system size (log L), as
opposed to the subleading constant term in gapped topologically ordered
systems. The photon subleading logarithm arises from the low-energy conformal
field theory and is essentially local in character. The particle subleading
logarithm arises due to the constraint of closed electric loops in the
wavefunction and is shown to be the natural generalization of topological
entanglement entropy to the U(1) spin liquid. This contribution to the
entanglement entropy can be isolated by means of the Grover-Turner-Vishwanath
construction (which generalizes the Kitaev-Preskill scheme to three
dimensions).Comment: 15+6 page
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