4,763 research outputs found
Quantum critical dynamics of the two-dimensional Bose gas
The dilute, two-dimensional Bose gas exhibits a novel regime of relaxational
dynamics in the regime k_B T > |\mu| where T is the absolute temperature and
\mu is the chemical potential. This may also be interpreted as the quantum
criticality of the zero density quantum critical point at \mu=0. We present a
theory for this dynamics, to leading order in 1/\ln (\Lambda/ (k_B T)), where
\Lambda is a high energy cutoff. Although pairwise interactions between the
bosons are weak at low energy scales, the collective dynamics are strongly
coupled even when \ln (\Lambda/T) is large. We argue that the strong-coupling
effects can be isolated in an effective classical model, which is then solved
numerically. Applications to experiments on the gap-closing transition of spin
gap antiferromagnets in an applied field are presented.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Metallic spin glasses
Recent work on the zero temperature phases and phase transitions of strongly
random electronic system is reviewed. The transition between the spin glass and
quantum paramagnet is examined, for both metallic and insulating systems.
Insight gained from the solution of infinite range models leads to a quantum
field theory for the transition between a metallic quantum paramagnetic and a
metallic spin glass. The finite temperature phase diagram is described and
crossover functions are computed in mean field theory. A study of fluctuations
about mean field leads to the formulation of scaling hypotheses.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings of the ITP Santa Barbara conference
on Non-Fermi liquids, 25 pages, requires IOP style file
SU(2)-invariant spin liquids on the triangular lattice with spinful Majorana excitations
We describe a new class of spin liquids with global SU(2) spin rotation
symmetry in spin 1/2 systems on the triangular lattice, which have real
Majorana fermion excitations carrying spin S = 1. The simplest
translationally-invariant mean-field state on the triangular lattice breaks
time-reversal symmetry and is stable to fluctuations. It generically possesses
gapless excitations along 3 Fermi lines in the Brillouin zone. These intersect
at a single point where the excitations scale with a dynamic exponent z = 3. An
external magnetic field has no orbital coupling to the SU(2) spin
rotation-invariant fermion bilinears that can give rise to a transverse thermal
conductivity, thus leading to the absence of a thermal Hall effect. The Zeeman
coupling is found to gap out two-thirds of the z = 3 excitations near the
intersection point and this leads to a suppression of the low temperature
specific heat, the spin susceptibility and the Wilson ratio. We also compute
physical properties in the presence of weak disorder and discuss possible
connections to recent experiments on organic insulators.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure
Competing orders II: the doped quantum dimer model
We study the phases of doped spin S=1/2 quantum antiferromagnets on the
square lattice, as they evolve from paramagnetic Mott insulators with valence
bond solid (VBS) order at zero doping, to superconductors at moderate doping.
The interplay between density wave/VBS order and superconductivity is
efficiently described by the quantum dimer model, which acts as an effective
theory for the total spin S=0 sector. We extend the dimer model to include
fermionic S=1/2 excitations, and show that its mean-field, static gauge field
saddle points have projective symmetries (PSGs) similar to those of `slave'
particle U(1) and SU(2) gauge theories. We account for the non-perturbative
effects of gauge fluctuations by a duality mapping of the S=0 dimer model. The
dual theory of vortices has a PSG identical to that found in a previous paper
(L. Balents et al., cond-mat/0408329) by a duality analysis of bosons on the
square lattice. The previous theory therefore also describes fluctuations
across superconducting, supersolid and Mott insulating phases of the present
electronic model. Finally, with the aim of describing neutron scattering
experiments, we present a phenomenological model for collective S=1 excitations
and their coupling to superflow and density wave fluctuations.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures; part I is cond-mat/0408329; (v2) changed title
and added clarification
Coulomb impurity in graphene
We consider the problem of screening of an electrically charged impurity in a
clean graphene sheet. When electron-electron interactions are neglected, the
screening charge has a sign opposite to that of the impurity, and is localized
near the impurity. Interactions between electrons smear out the induced charge
density to give a large-distance tail that follows approximately, but not
exactly, an r^{-2} behavior and with a sign which is the same as that of the
impurity.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures; (v2) Corrected sign error in Eq. (13); (v3)
corrected figure
Evolution of the single-hole spectral function across a quantum phase transition in the anisotropic-triangular-lattice antiferromagnet
We study the evolution of the single-hole spectral function when the ground
state of the anisotropic-triangular-lattice antiferromagnet changes from the
incommensurate magnetically-ordered phase to the spin-liquid state. In order to
describe both of the ground states on equal footing, we use the large-N
approach where the transition between these two phases can be obtained by
controlling the quantum fluctuations via an 'effective' spin magnitude. Adding
a hole into these ground states is described by a t-J type model in the
slave-fermion representation. Implications of our results to possible future
ARPES experiments on insulating frustrated magnets, especially CsCuCl,
are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Ergodicity from Nonergodicity in Quantum Correlations of Low-dimensional Spin Systems
Correlations between the parts of a many-body system, and its time dynamics,
lie at the heart of sciences, and they can be classical as well as quantum.
Quantum correlations are traditionally viewed as constituted out of classical
correlations and magnetizations. While that of course remains so, we show that
quantum correlations can have statistical mechanical properties like
ergodicity, which is not inherited from the corresponding classical
correlations and magnetizations, for the transverse anisotropic quantum XY
model in one-, two-, and quasi two-dimension, for suitably chosen transverse
fields and temperatures. The results have the potential for applications in
decoherence effects in realizable quantum computers.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, RevTeX 4.
Renyi Entropies for Free Field Theories
Renyi entropies S_q are useful measures of quantum entanglement; they can be
calculated from traces of the reduced density matrix raised to power q, with
q>=0. For (d+1)-dimensional conformal field theories, the Renyi entropies
across S^{d-1} may be extracted from the thermal partition functions of these
theories on either (d+1)-dimensional de Sitter space or R x H^d, where H^d is
the d-dimensional hyperbolic space. These thermal partition functions can in
turn be expressed as path integrals on branched coverings of the
(d+1)-dimensional sphere and S^1 x H^d, respectively. We calculate the Renyi
entropies of free massless scalars and fermions in d=2, and show how using
zeta-function regularization one finds agreement between the calculations on
the branched coverings of S^3 and on S^1 x H^2. Analogous calculations for
massive free fields provide monotonic interpolating functions between the Renyi
entropies at the Gaussian and the trivial fixed points. Finally, we discuss
similar Renyi entropy calculations in d>2.Comment: 35 pages, 4 figures; v2 refs added, minor change
Interaction-induced decoherence of atomic Bloch oscillations
We show that the energy spectrum of the Bose-Hubbard model amended by a
static field exhibits Wigner-Dyson level statistics. In itself a characteristic
signature of quantum chaos, this induces the irreversible decay of Bloch
oscillations of cold, interacting atoms loaded into an optical lattice, and
provides a Hamiltonian model for interaction induced decoherence.Comment: revtex4, figure 3 is substituted, small changes in the tex
U(1) spin liquids and valence bond solids in a large-N three-dimensional Heisenberg model
We study possible quantum ground states of the Sp(N) generalized Heisenberg
model on a cubic lattice with nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor
exchange interactions. The phase diagram is obtained in the large-N limit and
fluctuation effects are considered via appropriate gauge theories. In
particular, we find three U(1) spin liquid phases with different short-range
magnetic correlations. These phases are characterized by deconfined gapped
spinons, gapped monopoles, and gapless ``photons''. As N becomes smaller, a
confinement transition from these phases to valence bond solids (VBS) may
occur. This transition is studied by using duality and analyzing the resulting
theory of monopoles coupled to a non-compact dual gauge field; the condensation
of the monopoles leads to VBS phases. We determine the resulting VBS phases
emerging from two of the three spin liquid states. On the other hand, the spin
liquid state near J_1 \approx J_2 appears to be more stable against monopole
condensation and could be a promising candidate for a spin liquid state in real
systems.Comment: revtex file 12 pages, 17 figure
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