70 research outputs found

    Reduced Density Matrices and Topological Order in a Quantum Dimer Model

    Full text link
    Resonating valence bond (RVB) liquids in two dimensions are believed to exhibit topological order and to admit no local order parameter of any kind. This is a defining property of "liquids" but it has been explicitly confirmed only in a few exactly solvable models. In this paper, we investigate the quantum dimer model on the triangular lattice. It possesses an RVB-type liquid phase, however, for which the absence of a local order parameter has not been proved. We examine the question numerically with a measure based on reduced density matrices. We find a scaling of the measure which strongly supports the absence of any local order parameter.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter (Proceedings of "Highly Frustrated Magnets", Osaka (Japan), August 2006). Version 2: improved figures containing new data and minor changes in the tex

    Two-dimensional quantum antiferromagnets

    Full text link
    This review presents some theoretical advances in the field of quantum magnetism in two-dimensional systems, and quantum spin liquids in particular. It is to be published as a chapter in the second edition of the book "Frustrated spin systems", edited by H. T. Diep (World-Scientific). The section (Sec. 7) devoted to the kagome antiferromagnet has been completely rewritten/updated, as well as the concluding section (Sec. 8). The other sections (Secs. 1-6) are unchanged from the first edition of the book (published in 2005)Comment: 87 pages. 396 references. To be published as a chapter in the second edition of the book "Frustrated spin systems", edited by H. T. Diep (World-Scientific

    Competing Valence Bond Crystals in the Kagome Quantum Dimer Model

    Full text link
    The singlet dynamics which plays a major role in the physics of the spin-1/2 Quantum Heisenberg Antiferromagnet (QHAF) on the Kagome lattice can be approximately described by projecting onto the nearest-neighbor valence bond (NNVB) singlet subspace. We re-visit here the effective Quantum Dimer Model which originates from the latter NNVB-projected Heisenberg model via a non-perturbative Rokhsar-Kivelson-like scheme. By using Lanczos exact diagonalisation on a 108-site cluster supplemented by a careful symmetry analysis, it is shown that a previously-found 36-site Valence Bond Crystal (VBC) in fact competes with a new type of 12-site "{\it resonating-columnar}" VBC. The exceptionally large degeneracy of the GS multiplets (144 on our 108-site cluster) might reflect the proximity of the Z_2 dimer liquid. Interestingly, these two VBC "emerge" in {\it different topological sectors}. Implications for the interpretation of numerical results on the QHAF are outlined.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables; Figure 2 and Table II update

    Multistability of Driven-Dissipative Quantum Spins

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of lattice models of quantum spins one-half, driven by a coherent drive and subject to dissipation. Generically the meanfield limit of these models manifests multistable parameter regions of coexisting steady states with different magnetizations. We introduce an efficient scheme accounting for the corrections to meanfield by correlations at leading order, and benchmark this scheme using high-precision numerics based on matrix-product-operators in one- and two-dimensional lattices. Correlations are shown to wash the meanfield bistability in dimension one, leading to a unique steady state. In dimension two and higher, we find that multistability is again possible, provided the thermodynamic limit of an infinitely large lattice is taken first with respect to the long time limit. Variation of the system parameters results in jumps between the different steady states, each showing a critical slowing down in the convergence of perturbations towards the steady state. Experiments with trapped ions can realize the model and possibly answer open questions in the nonequilibrium many-body dynamics of these quantum systems, beyond the system sizes accessible to present numerics

    Finite-size scaling of the Shannon-R\'enyi entropy in two-dimensional systems with spontaneously broken continuous symmetry

    Full text link
    We study the scaling of the (basis dependent) Shannon entropy for two-dimensional quantum antiferromagnets with N\'eel long-range order. We use a massless free-field description of the gapless spin wave modes and phase space arguments to treat the fact that the finite-size ground state is rotationally symmetric, while there are degenerate physical ground states which break the symmetry. Our results show that the Shannon entropy (and its R\'enyi generalizations) possesses some universal logarithmic term proportional to the number NNGN_\text{NG} of Nambu-Goldstone modes. In the case of a torus, we show that Sn>1≃const.N+NNG4nn−1ln⁡NS_{n>1} \simeq {\rm const.} N+ \frac{N_\text{NG}}{4}\frac{n}{n-1} \ln{N} and S1≃const.N−NNG4ln⁡NS_1 \simeq {\rm const.} N - \frac{N_\text{NG}}{4} \ln{N}, where NN is the total number of sites and nn the R\'enyi index. The result for n>1n>1 is in reasonable agreement with the quantum Monte Carlo results of Luitz et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 057203 (2014)], and qualitatively similar to those obtained previously for the entanglement entropy. The Shannon entropy of a line subsystem (embedded in the two-dimensional system) is also considered. Finally, we present some density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) calculations for a spin12\frac{1}{2} XY model on the square lattice in a cylinder geometry. These numerical data confirm our findings for logarithmic terms in the n=∞n=\infty R\'enyi entropy (also called −ln⁡pmax-\ln{p_{\rm max}}). They also reveal some universal dependence on the cylinder aspect ratio, in good agreement with the fact that, in that case, pmaxp_{\rm max} is related to a non-compact free-boson partition function in dimension 1+1.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, v2: published versio

    Comment on "Regional Versus Global Entanglement in Resonating-Valence-Bond States"

    Full text link
    In a recent Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 170502 (2007); quant-ph/0703227], Chandran and coworkers study the entanglement properties of valence bond (VB) states. Their main result is that VB states do not contain (or only an insignificant amount of) two-site entanglement, whereas they possess multi-body entanglement. Two examples ("RVB gas and liquid") are given to illustrate this claim, which essentially comes from a lower bound derived for spin correlators in VB states. We show in this Comment that (i) for the "RVB liquid" on the square lattice, the calculations and conclusions of Chandran et al. are incorrect. (ii) A simple analytical calculation gives the exact value of the correlator for the "RVB gas", showing that the bound found by Chandran et al. is tight. (iii) The lower bound for spin correlators in VB states is equivalent to a celebrated result of Anderson dating from more than 50 years ago.Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, slightly longer than published versio

    Flux quench in a system of interacting spinless fermions in one dimension

    Get PDF
    We study a quantum quench in a one-dimensional spinless fermion model (equivalent to the XXZ spin chain), where a magnetic flux is suddenly switched off. This quench is equivalent to imposing a pulse of electric field and therefore generates an initial particle current. This current is not a conserved quantity in presence of a lattice and interactions and we investigate numerically its time-evolution after the quench, using the infinite time-evolving block decimation method. For repulsive interactions or large initial flux, we find oscillations that are governed by excitations deep inside the Fermi sea. At long times we observe that the current remains non-vanishing in the gapless cases, whereas it decays to zero in the gapped cases. Although the linear response theory (valid for a weak flux) predicts the same long-time limit of the current for repulsive and attractive interactions (relation with the zero-temperature Drude weight), larger nonlinearities are observed in the case of repulsive interactions compared with that of the attractive case.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures; v2: Added references. Figures are refined and animations are added. Corrected typos. Published versio

    R\'enyi entropy of a line in two-dimensional Ising models

    Full text link
    We consider the two-dimensional (2d) Ising model on a infinitely long cylinder and study the probabilities pip_i to observe a given spin configuration ii along a circular section of the cylinder. These probabilities also occur as eigenvalues of reduced density matrices in some Rokhsar-Kivelson wave-functions. We analyze the subleading constant to the R\'enyi entropy Rn=1/(1−n)ln⁡(∑ipin)R_n=1/(1-n) \ln (\sum_i p_i^n) and discuss its scaling properties at the critical point. Studying three different microscopic realizations, we provide numerical evidence that it is universal and behaves in a step-like fashion as a function of nn, with a discontinuity at the Shannon point n=1n=1. As a consequence, a field theoretical argument based on the replica trick would fail to give the correct value at this point. We nevertheless compute it numerically with high precision. Two other values of the R\'enyi parameter are of special interest: n=1/2n=1/2 and n=∞n=\infty are related in a simple way to the Affleck-Ludwig boundary entropies associated to free and fixed boundary conditions respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. To be submitted to Physical Review

    R\'enyi entanglement entropies in quantum dimer models : from criticality to topological order

    Full text link
    Thanks to Pfaffian techniques, we study the R\'enyi entanglement entropies and the entanglement spectrum of large subsystems for two-dimensional Rokhsar-Kivelson wave functions constructed from a dimer model on the triangular lattice. By including a fugacity tt on some suitable bonds, one interpolates between the triangular lattice (t=1) and the square lattice (t=0). The wave function is known to be a massive Z2\mathbb Z_2 topological liquid for t>0t>0 whereas it is a gapless critical state at t=0. We mainly consider two geometries for the subsystem: that of a semi-infinite cylinder, and the disk-like setup proposed by Kitaev and Preskill [Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 110404 (2006)]. In the cylinder case, the entropies contain an extensive term -- proportional to the length of the boundary -- and a universal sub-leading constant sn(t)s_n(t). Fitting these cylinder data (up to a perimeter of L=32 sites) provides sns_n with a very high numerical accuracy (10−910^{-9} at t=1 and 10−610^{-6} at t=0.5t=0.5). In the topological Z2\mathbb{Z}_2 liquid phase we find sn(t>0)=−ln⁡2s_n(t>0)=-\ln 2, independent of the fugacity tt and the R\'enyi parameter nn. At t=0 we recover a previously known result, sn(t=0)=−(1/2)ln⁡(n)/(n−1)s_n(t=0)=-(1/2)\ln(n)/(n-1) for n1n1. In the disk-like geometry -- designed to get rid of the boundary contributions -- we find an entropy snKP(t>0)=−ln⁡2s^{\rm KP}_n(t>0)=-\ln 2 in the whole massive phase whatever n>0n>0, in agreement with the result of Flammia {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 261601 (2009)]. Some results for the gapless limit RnKP(t→0)R^{\rm KP}_n(t\to 0) are discussed.Comment: 33 pages, 17 figures, minor correction
    • 

    corecore