1,180 research outputs found
Spinon excitation spectra of the - chain from analytical calculations in the dimer basis and exact diagonalization
The excitation spectrum of the frustrated spin- Heisenberg chain is
reexamined using variational and exact diagonalization calculations. We show
that the overlap matrix of the short-range resonating valence bond states basis
can be inverted which yields tractable equations for single and two spinons
excitations. Older results are recovered and new ones, such as the bond-state
dispersion relation and its size with momentum at the Majumdar-Ghosh point are
found. In particular, this approach yields a gap opening at and
an onset of incommensurability in the dispersion relation at [as
in S. Brehmer \emph{et al.}, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter \textbf{10}, 1103
(1998)]. These analytical results provide a good support for the understanding
of exact diagonalization spectra, assuming an independent spinons picture.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Pair Density Waves in coupled doped two-leg Ladders
Motivated by Resonant X-ray scattering experiments in cuprate ladder
materials showing charge order modulation of period and 5 at
specific hole densities, we investigate models involving the electronic t-J
ladders and bosonic chains coupled via screened Coulomb repulsion. Extensive
density matrix renormalization group calculations applied to the ladders/chains
supplemented by a self-consistent mean-field treatment of the
inter-ladder/chain coupling provide quantitative estimates of the charge order
for and 5. As previously proposed, such patterns correspond to
the emergence of pair density waves which stem from the strong electronic
correlations. We comment on the existence of a modulation not seen
so far in experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Magnetic responses of randomly depleted spin ladders
The magnetic responses of a spin-1/2 ladder doped with non-magnetic
impurities are studied using various methods and including the regime where
frustration induces incommensurability. Several improvements are made on the
results of the seminal work of Sigrist and Furusaki [J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 65,
2385 (1996)]. Deviations from the Brillouin magnetic curve due to interactions
are also analyzed. First, the magnetic profile around a single impurity and
effective interactions between impurities are analyzed within the bond-operator
mean-field theory and compared to density-matrix renormalization group
calculations. Then, the temperature behavior of the Curie constant is studied
in details. At zero-temperature, we give doping-dependent corrections to the
results of Sigrist and Furusaki on general bipartite lattice and compute
exactly the distribution of ladder cluster due to chain breaking effects. Using
exact diagonalization and quantum Monte-Carlo methods on the effective model,
the temperature dependence of the Curie constant is compared to a random dimer
model and a real-space renormalization group scenario. Next, the low-part of
the magnetic curve corresponding to the contribution of impurities is computed
using exact diagonalization. The random dimer model is shown to capture the
bulk of the curve, accounting for the deviation from the Brillouin response. At
zero-temperature, the effective model prediction agrees relatively well with
density-matrix renormalization group calculations. Finite-temperature effects
are displayed within the effective model and for large depleted ladder models
using quantum Monte-Carlo simulations. In all, the effect of incommensurability
does not display a strong qualitative effect on both the magnetic
susceptibility and the magnetic curve. Consequences for experiments on the
BiCu2PO6 compound and other spin-gapped materials are briefly discussed.Comment: 24 pages, 20 figure
Melting of a frustration-induced dimer crystal and incommensurability in the J_1-J_2 two-leg ladder
The phase diagram of an antiferromagnetic ladder with frustrating
next-nearest neighbor couplings along the legs is determined using numerical
methods (exact diagonalization and density-matrix renormalization group)
supplemented by strong-coupling and mean-field analysis. Interestingly, this
model displays remarkable features, bridging the physics of the J_1-J_2 chain
and of the unfrustated ladder. The phase diagram as a function of the
transverse coupling J_{\perp} and the frustration J_2 exhibits an Ising
transition between a columnar phase of dimers and the usual rung-singlet phase
of two-leg ladders. The transition is driven by resonating valence bond
fluctuations in the singlet sector while the triplet spin gap remains finite
across the transition. In addition, frustration brings incommensurability in
the real-space spin correlation functions, the onset of which evolves smoothly
from the J_1-J_2 chain value to zero in the large-J_{\perp} limit. The onset of
incommensurability in the spin structure-factor and in the dispersion relation
is also analyzed. The physics of the frustrated rung-singlet phase is well
understood using perturbative expansions and mean-field theories in the
large-J_{\perp} limit. Lastly, we discuss the effect of the non-trivial magnon
dispersion relation on the thermodynamical properties of the system. The
relation of this model and its physics to experimental observations on
compounds which are currently investigated, such as BiCu_2PO_6, is eventually
addressed.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure
Slow quench dynamics of a trapped one-dimensional Bose gas confined to an optical lattice
We analyze the effect of a linear time-variation of the interaction strength
on a trapped one-dimensional Bose gas confined to an optical lattice. The
evolution of different observables such as the experimentally accessible onsite
particle distribution are studied as a function of the ramp time using
time-dependent exact diagonalization and density-matrix renormalization group
techniques. We find that the dynamics of a trapped system typically display two
regimes: for long ramp times, the dynamics are governed by density
redistribution, while at short ramp times, local dynamics dominate as the
evolution is identical to that of an homogeneous system. In the homogeneous
limit, we also discuss the non-trivial scaling of the energy absorbed with the
ramp time.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, version published in PR
Phase diagram of hard-core bosons on clean and disordered 2-leg ladders: Mott insulator - Luttinger liquid - Bose glass
One dimensional free-fermions and hard-core bosons are often considered to be
equivalent. Indeed, when restricted to nearest-neighbor hopping on a chain the
particles cannot exchange themselves, and therefore hardly experience their own
statistics. Apart from the off-diagonal correlations which depends on the
so-called Jordan-Wigner string, real-space observables are similar for
free-fermions and hard-core bosons on a chain. Interestingly, by coupling only
two chains, thus forming a two-leg ladder, particle exchange becomes allowed,
and leads to a totally different physics between free-fermions and hard-core
bosons. Using a combination of analytical (strong coupling, field theory,
renormalization group) and numerical (quantum Monte Carlo, density-matrix
renormalization group) approaches, we study the apparently simple but
non-trivial model of hard-core bosons hopping in a two-leg ladder geometry. At
half-filling, while a band insulator appears for fermions at large interchain
hopping tperp >2t only, a Mott gap opens up for bosons as soon as tperp\neq0
through a Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. Away from half-filling, the situation
is even more interesting since a gapless Luttinger liquid mode emerges in the
symmetric sector with a non-trivial filling-dependent Luttinger parameter
1/2\leq Ks \leq 1. Consequences for experiments in cold atoms, spin ladders in
a magnetic field, as well as disorder effects are discussed. In particular, a
quantum phase transition is expected at finite disorder strength between a 1D
superfluid and an insulating Bose glass phase.Comment: 24 pages, 23 figure
Statistical properties of the spectrum the extended Bose-Hubbard model
Motivated by the role that spectral properties play for the dynamical
evolution of a quantum many-body system, we investigate the level spacing
statistic of the extended Bose-Hubbard model. In particular, we focus on the
distribution of the ratio of adjacent level spacings, useful at large
interaction, to distinguish between chaotic and non-chaotic regimes. After
revisiting the bare Bose-Hubbard model, we study the effect of two different
perturbations: next-nearest neighbor hopping and nearest-neighbor interaction.
The system size dependence is investigated together with the effect of the
proximity to integrable points or lines. Lastly, we discuss the consequences of
a cutoff in the number of onsite bosons onto the level statistics.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figure
Reply to "Comment on `Quenches in quantum many-body systems: One-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model reexamined' ''
In his Comment [see preceding Comment, Phys. Rev. A 82, 037601 (2010)] on the
paper by Roux [Phys. Rev. A 79, 021608(R) (2009)], Rigol argued that the energy
distribution after a quench is not related to standard statistical ensembles
and cannot explain thermalization. The latter is proposed to stem from what he
calls the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis and which boils down to the fact
that simple observables are expected to be smooth functions of the energy. In
this Reply, we show that there is no contradiction or confusion between the
observations and discussions of Roux and the expected thermalization scenario
discussed by Rigol. In addition, we emphasize a few other important aspects, in
particular the definition of temperature and the equivalence of ensemble, which
are much more difficult to show numerically even though we believe they are
essential to the discussion of thermalization. These remarks could be of
interest to people interested in the interpretation of the data obtained on
finite-size systems.Comment: 3 page
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