95 research outputs found
Matrix Product States for Trial Quantum Hall States
We obtain an exact matrix-product-state (MPS) representation of a large
series of fractional quantum Hall (FQH) states in various geometries of genus
0. The states in question include all paired k=2 Jack polynomials, such as the
Moore-Read and Gaffnian states, as well as the Read-Rezayi k=3 state. We also
outline the procedures through which the MPS of other model FQH states can be
obtained, provided their wavefunction can be written as a correlator in a 1+1
conformal field theory (CFT). The auxiliary Hilbert space of the MPS, which
gives the counting of the entanglement spectrum, is then simply the Hilbert
space of the underlying CFT. This formalism enlightens the link between
entanglement spectrum and edge modes. Properties of model wavefunctions such as
the thin-torus root partitions and squeezing are recast in the MPS form, and
numerical benchmarks for the accuracy of the new MPS prescription in various
geometries are provided.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, published versio
Model Wavefunctions for the Collective Modes and the Magneto-roton Theory of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
We construct model wavefunctions for the collective modes of fractional
quantum Hall systems. The wavefunctions are expressed in terms of symmetric
polynomials characterized by a root partition and a "squeezed" basis, and show
excellent agreement with exact diagonalization results for finite systems. In
the long wavelength limit, the model wavefunctions reduce to those predicted by
the single-mode approximation, and remain accurate at energies above the
continuum of roton pairs.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, minor changes for the final prl versio
Electron-solid and electron-liquid phases in graphene
We investigate the competition between electron-solid and quantum-liquid phases in graphene, which arise in partially filled Landau levels. The differences in the wave function describing the electrons in the presence of a perpendicular magnetic field in graphene with respect to the conventional semiconductors, such as GaAs, can be captured in a form factor which carries the Landau-level index. This leads to a quantitative difference in the electron-solid and -liquid energies. For the lowest Landau level, there is no difference in the wave function of relativistic and nonrelativistic systems. We compute the cohesive energy of the solid phase analytically using a Hartree-Fock Hamiltonian. The liquid energies are computed analytically as well as numerically, using exact diagonalization. We find that the liquid phase dominates in the n=1 Landau level, whereas the Wigner crystal and electron-bubble phases become more prominent in the n=2 and 3 Landau level
Generalized Pseudopotentials for the Anisotropic Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
We generalize the notion of Haldane pseudopotentials to anisotropic fractional quantum Hall (FQH) systems that are physically realized, e.g., in tilted magnetic field experiments or anisotropic band structures. This formalism allows us to expand any translation-invariant interaction over a complete basis, and directly reveals the intrinsic metric of incompressible FQH fluids. We show that purely anisotropic pseudopotentials give rise to new types of bound states for small particle clusters in the infinite plane, and can be used as a diagnostic of FQH nematic order. We also demonstrate that generalized pseudopotentials quantify the anisotropic contribution to the effective interaction potential, which can be particularly large in models of fractional Chern insulators
Quantum scars as embeddings of weakly broken Lie algebra representations
Recently, much effort has focused on understanding weak ergodicity breaking in many-body quantum systems that could lead to wavefunction revivals in their dynamics far from equilibrium. An example of such nonthermalizing behavior is the phenomenon of quantum many-body scars, which has been experimentally observed in Rydberg-atom quantum simulators. Here, the authors show that many-body scars can generally be viewed as forming approximate subspaces of “broken” Lie algebra representations. Furthermore, they use an iterative process to identify perturbations which “correct” the broken Lie algebra, resulting in improved quantum revivals from special initial states. The description of embedded Lie algebra representations unifies several theoretical models, which feature exact many-body scars, with experimentally realized models, such as the constrained Rydberg-atom system, where scars only form an approximate Lie algebra representation.
We present an interpretation of scar states and quantum revivals as weakly “broken” representations of Lie algebras spanned by a subset of eigenstates of a many-body quantum system. We show that the PXP model, describing strongly interacting Rydberg atoms, supports a “loose” embedding of multiple su(2) Lie algebras corresponding to distinct families of scarred eigenstates. Moreover, we demonstrate that these embeddings can be made progressively more accurate via an iterative process which results in optimal perturbations that stabilize revivals from arbitrary charge density wave product states, |Zn〉, including ones that show no revivals in the unperturbed PXP model. We discuss the relation between the loose embeddings of Lie algebras present in the PXP model and recent exact constructions of scarred states in related models
Imaging Anyons with Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
Anyons are exotic quasiparticles with fractional charge that can emerge as fundamental excitations of strongly interacting topological quantum phases of matter. Unlike ordinary fermions and bosons, they may obey non-Abelian statistics—a property that would help realize fault-tolerant quantum computation. Non-Abelian anyons have long been predicted to occur in the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) phases that form in two-dimensional electron gases in the presence of a large magnetic field, such as the ν=5/2 FQH state. However, direct experimental evidence of anyons and tests that can distinguish between Abelian and non-Abelian quantum ground states with such excitations have remained elusive. Here, we propose a new experimental approach to directly visualize the structure of interacting electronic states of FQH states with the STM. Our theoretical calculations show how spectroscopy mapping with the STM near individual impurity defects can be used to image fractional statistics in FQH states, identifying unique signatures in such measurements that can distinguish different proposed ground states. The presence of locally trapped anyons should leave distinct signatures in STM spectroscopic maps, and enables a new approach to directly detect—and perhaps ultimately manipulate—these exotic quasiparticles
- …