574 research outputs found
Quantum spin liquid with a Majorana Fermi surface on the three-dimensional hyperoctagon lattice
Motivated by the recent synthesis of -LiIrO -- a spin-orbit
entangled Mott insulator with a three-dimensional lattice structure of
the Ir ions -- we consider generalizations of the Kitaev model believed
to capture some of the microscopic interactions between the Iridium moments on
various trivalent lattice structures in three spatial dimensions. Of particular
interest is the so-called hyperoctagon lattice -- the premedial lattice of the
hyperkagome lattice, for which the ground state is a gapless quantum spin
liquid where the gapless Majorana modes form an extended two-dimensional
Majorana Fermi surface. We demonstrate that this Majorana Fermi surface is
inherently protected by lattice symmetries and discuss possible instabilities.
We thus provide the first example of an analytically tractable microscopic
model of interacting SU(2) spin-1/2 degrees of freedom in three spatial
dimensions that harbors a spin liquid with a two-dimensional spinon Fermi
surface
Renyi entropies for classical stringnet models
In quantum mechanics, stringnet condensed states - a family of prototypical
states exhibiting non-trivial topological order - can be classified via their
long-range entanglement properties, in particular topological corrections to
the prevalent area law of the entanglement entropy. Here we consider classical
analogs of such stringnet models whose partition function is given by an
equal-weight superposition of classical stringnet configurations. Our analysis
of the Shannon and Renyi entropies for a bipartition of a given system reveals
that the prevalent volume law for these classical entropies is augmented by
subleading topological corrections that are intimately linked to the anyonic
theories underlying the construction of the classical models. We determine the
universal values of these topological corrections for a number of underlying
anyonic theories including su(2)_k, su(N)_1, and su(N)_2 theories
Non-local updates for quantum Monte Carlo simulations
We review the development of update schemes for quantum lattice models
simulated using world line quantum Monte Carlo algorithms. Starting from the
Suzuki-Trotter mapping we discuss limitations of local update algorithms and
highlight the main developments beyond Metropolis-style local updates: the
development of cluster algorithms, their generalization to continuous time, the
worm and directed-loop algorithms and finally a generalization of the flat
histogram method of Wang and Landau to quantum systems.Comment: 14 pages, article for the proceedings of the "The Monte Carlo Method
in the Physical Sciences: Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Metropolis
Algorithm", Los Alamos, June 9-11, 200
Relevance of the Heisenberg-Kitaev model for the honeycomb lattice iridates A_2IrO_3
Combining thermodynamic measurements with theoretical density functional and
thermodynamic calculations we demonstrate that the honeycomb lattice iridates
A2IrO3 (A = Na, Li) are magnetically ordered Mott insulators where the
magnetism of the effective spin-orbital S = 1/2 moments can be captured by a
Heisenberg-Kitaev (HK) model with Heisenberg interactions beyond
nearest-neighbor exchange. Experimentally, we observe an increase of the
Curie-Weiss temperature from \theta = -125 K for Na2IrO3 to \theta = -33 K for
Li2IrO3, while the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature remains roughly the
same T_N = 15 K for both materials. Using finite-temperature functional
renormalization group calculations we show that this evolution of \theta, T_N,
the frustration parameter f = \theta/T_N, and the zig-zag magnetic ordering
structure suggested for both materials by density functional theory can be
captured within this extended HK model. Combining our experimental and
theoretical results, we estimate that Na2IrO3 is deep in the magnetically
ordered regime of the HK model (\alpha \approx 0.25), while Li2IrO3 appears to
be close to a spin-liquid regime (0.6 < \alpha < 0.7).Comment: Version accepted for publication in PRL. Additional DFT and
thermodynamic calculations have been included. 6 pages of supplementary
material include
Chiral spin liquid and emergent anyons in a Kagome lattice Mott insulator
Topological phases in frustrated quantum spin systems have fascinated
researchers for decades. One of the earliest proposals for such a phase was the
chiral spin liquid put forward by Kalmeyer and Laughlin in 1987 as the bosonic
analogue of the fractional quantum Hall effect. Elusive for many years, recent
times have finally seen a number of models that realize this phase. However,
these models are somewhat artificial and unlikely to be found in realistic
materials. Here, we take an important step towards the goal of finding a chiral
spin liquid in nature by examining a physically motivated model for a Mott
insulator on the Kagome lattice with broken time-reversal symmetry. We first
provide a theoretical justification for the emergent chiral spin liquid phase
in terms of a network model perspective. We then present an unambiguous
numerical identification and characterization of the universal topological
properties of the phase, including ground state degeneracy, edge physics, and
anyonic bulk excitations, by using a variety of powerful numerical probes,
including the entanglement spectrum and modular transformations.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures; partially supersedes arXiv:1303.696
Ramping fermions in optical lattices across a Feshbach resonance
We study the properties of ultracold Fermi gases in a three-dimensional
optical lattice when crossing a Feshbach resonance. By using a zero-temperature
formalism, we show that three-body processes are enhanced in a lattice system
in comparison to the continuum case. This poses one possible explanation for
the short molecule lifetimes found when decreasing the magnetic field across a
Feshbach resonance. Effects of finite temperatures on the molecule formation
rates are also discussed by computing the fraction of double-occupied sites.
Our results show that current experiments are performed at temperatures
considerably higher than expected: lower temperatures are required for
fermionic systems to be used to simulate quantum Hamiltonians. In addition, by
relating the double occupancy of the lattice to the temperature, we provide a
means for thermometry in fermionic lattice systems, previously not accessible
experimentally. The effects of ramping a filled lowest band across a Feshbach
resonance when increasing the magnetic field are also discussed: fermions are
lifted into higher bands due to entanglement of Bloch states, in good agreement
with recent experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Overcoming the critical slowing down of flat-histogram Monte Carlo simulations: Cluster updates and optimized broad-histogram ensembles
We study the performance of Monte Carlo simulations that sample a broad
histogram in energy by determining the mean first-passage time to span the
entire energy space of d-dimensional ferromagnetic Ising/Potts models. We first
show that flat-histogram Monte Carlo methods with single-spin flip updates such
as the Wang-Landau algorithm or the multicanonical method perform sub-optimally
in comparison to an unbiased Markovian random walk in energy space. For the
d=1,2,3 Ising model, the mean first-passage time \tau scales with the number of
spins N=L^d as \tau \propto N^2L^z. The critical exponent z is found to
decrease as the dimensionality d is increased. In the mean-field limit of
infinite dimensions we find that z vanishes up to logarithmic corrections. We
then demonstrate how the slowdown characterized by z>0 for finite d can be
overcome by two complementary approaches - cluster dynamics in connection with
Wang-Landau sampling and the recently developed ensemble optimization
technique. Both approaches are found to improve the random walk in energy space
so that \tau \propto N^2 up to logarithmic corrections for the d=1 and d=2
Ising model
Strong-disorder renormalization for interacting non-Abelian anyon systems in two dimensions
We consider the effect of quenched spatial disorder on systems of
interacting, pinned non-Abelian anyons as might arise in disordered Hall
samples at filling fractions \nu=5/2 or \nu=12/5. In one spatial dimension,
such disordered anyon models have previously been shown to exhibit a hierarchy
of infinite randomness phases. Here, we address systems in two spatial
dimensions and report on the behavior of Ising and Fibonacci anyons under the
numerical strong-disorder renormalization group (SDRG). In order to manage the
topology-dependent interactions generated during the flow, we introduce a
planar approximation to the SDRG treatment. We characterize this planar
approximation by studying the flow of disordered hard-core bosons and the
transverse field Ising model, where it successfully reproduces the known
infinite randomness critical point with exponent \psi ~ 0.43. Our main
conclusion for disordered anyon models in two spatial dimensions is that
systems of Ising anyons as well as systems of Fibonacci anyons do not realize
infinite randomness phases, but flow back to weaker disorder under the
numerical SDRG treatment.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, 1 tabl
Optimized Folding Simulations of Protein A
We describe optimized parallel tempering simulations of the 46-residue
B-fragment of protein A. Native-like configurations with a root-mean-square
deviation of approximately 3A to the experimentally determined structure
(Protein Data Bank identifier 1BDD) are found. However, at biologically
relevant temperatures such conformations appear with only about 10% frequency
in our simulations. Possible short comings in our energy function are
discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
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