3,753 research outputs found
Direct mapping of the finite temperature phase diagram of strongly correlated quantum models
Optical lattice experiments, with the unique potential of tuning interactions
and density, have emerged as emulators of nontrivial theoretical models that
are directly relevant for strongly correlated materials. However, so far the
finite temperature phase diagram has not been mapped out for any strongly
correlated quantum model. We propose a remarkable method for obtaining such a
phase diagram for the first time directly from experiments using only the
density profile in the trap as the input. We illustrate the procedure
explicitly for the Bose Hubbard model, a textbook example of a quantum phase
transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator. Using "exact" quantum Monte
Carlo simulations in a trap with up to bosons, we show that kinks in the
local compressibility, arising from critical fluctuations, demarcate the
boundaries between superfluid and normal phases in the trap. The temperature of
the bosons in the optical lattice is determined from the density profile at the
edge. Our method can be applied to other phase transitions even when reliable
numerical results are not available.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Numerical study of the ordering of the +-J XY spin-glass ladder
The properties of the domain-wall energy and of the correlation length are
studied numerically for the one-dimensional +-J XY spin glass on the two-leg
ladder lattice, focusing on both the spin and the chirality degrees of freedom.
Analytic results obtained by Ney-Niftle et al for the same model were confirmed
for asymptotically large lattices, while the approach to the asymptotic limit
is slow and sometimes even non-monotonic. Attention is called to the occurrence
of the SO(2)-Z_2 decoupling and its masking in spin correlations, the latter
reflecting the inequality between the SO(2) and Z_2 exponents. Discussion is
given concerning the behaviors of the higher-dimensional models.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Generalization of the Fortuin-Kasteleyn transformation and its application to quantum spin simulations,
We generalize the Fortuin-Kasteleyn (FK) cluster representation of the
partition function of the Ising model to represent the partition function of
quantum spin models with an arbitrary spin magnitude in arbitrary dimensions.
This generalized representation enables us to develop a new cluster algorithm
for the simulation of quantum spin systems by the worldline Monte Carlo method.
Because the Swendsen-Wang algorithm is based on the FK representation, the new
cluster algorithm naturally includes it as a special case. As well as the
general description of the new representation, we present an illustration of
our new algorithm for some special interesting cases: the Ising model, the
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model with , and a general Heisenberg model.
The new algorithm is applicable to models with any range of the exchange
interaction, any lattice geometry, and any dimensions.Comment: 46 pages, 10 figures, to appear in J.Stat.Phy
Quantum simulations of the superfluid-insulator transition for two-dimensional, disordered, hard-core bosons
We introduce two novel quantum Monte Carlo methods and employ them to study
the superfluid-insulator transition in a two-dimensional system of hard-core
bosons. One of the methods is appropriate for zero temperature and is based
upon Green's function Monte Carlo; the other is a finite-temperature world-line
cluster algorithm. In each case we find that the dynamical exponent is
consistent with the theoretical prediction of by Fisher and co-workers.Comment: Revtex, 10 pages, 3 figures (postscript files attached at end,
separated by %%%%%% Fig # %%%%%, where # is 1-3). LA-UR-94-270
Crossovers in the Two Dimensional Ising Spin Glass with ferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbor interactions
By means of extensive computer simulations we analyze in detail the two
dimensional Ising spin glass with ferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbor
interactions. We found a crossover from ferromagnetic to ``spin glass'' like
order both from numerical simulations and analytical arguments. We also present
evidences of a second crossover from the ``spin glass'' behavior to a
paramagnetic phase for the largest volume studied.Comment: 19 pages with 9 postscript figures also available at
http://chimera.roma1.infn.it/index_papers_complex.html. Some changes in
captions of figures 1 and
Monte Carlo Simulation of the Three-dimensional Ising Spin Glass
We study the 3D Edwards-Anderson model with binary interactions by Monte
Carlo simulations. Direct evidence of finite-size scaling is provided, and the
universal finite-size scaling functions are determined. Using an iterative
extrapolation procedure, Monte Carlo data are extrapolated to infinite volume
up to correlation length \xi = 140. The infinite volume data are consistent
with both a continuous phase transition at finite temperature and an essential
singularity at finite temperature. An essential singularity at zero temperature
is excluded.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Proceedings of the Workshop "Computer Simulation
Studies in Condensed Matter Physics XII", Eds. D.P. Landau, S.P. Lewis, and
H.B. Schuettler, (Springer Verlag, Heidelberg, Berlin, 1999
Scalings of domain wall energies in two dimensional Ising spin glasses
We study domain wall energies of two dimensional spin glasses. The scaling of
these energies depends on the model's distribution of quenched random
couplings, falling into three different classes. The first class is associated
with the exponent theta =-0.28, the other two classes have theta = 0, as can be
justified theoretically. In contrast to previous claims, we find that theta=0
does not indicate d=d_l but rather d <= d_l, where d_l is the lower critical
dimension.Comment: Clarifications and extra reference
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