5,751 research outputs found
Valence bond solid order near impurities in two-dimensional quantum antiferromagnets
Recent scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) experiments on underdoped
cuprates have displayed modulations in the local electronic density of states
which are centered on a Cu-O-Cu bond (Kohsaka et. al., cond-mat/0703309). As a
paradigm of the pinning of such bond-centered ordering in strongly correlated
systems, we present the theory of valence bond solid (VBS) correlations near a
single impurity in a square lattice antiferromagnet. The antiferromagnet is
assumed to be in the vicinity of a quantum transition from a magnetically
ordered Neel state to a spin-gap state with long-range VBS order. We identify
two distinct classes of impurities: i) local modulation in the exchange
constants, and ii) a missing or additional spin, for which the impurity
perturbation is represented by an uncompensated Berry phase. The `boundary'
critical theory for these classes is developed: in the second class we find a
`VBS pinwheel' around the impurity, accompanied by a suppression in the VBS
susceptibility. Implications for numerical studies of quantum antiferromagnets
and for STM experiments on the cuprates are noted.Comment: 41 pages, 6 figures; (v2) Minor changes in terminology, added
reference
Percolation quantum phase transitions in diluted magnets
We show that the interplay of geometric criticality and quantum fluctuations
leads to a novel universality class for the percolation quantum phase
transition in diluted magnets. All critical exponents involving dynamical
correlations are different from the classical percolation values, but in two
dimensions they can nonetheless be determined exactly. We develop a complete
scaling theory of this transition, and we relate it to recent experiments in
LaCu(Zn,Mg)O. Our results are also relevant for
disordered interacting boson systems.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, final version, as publishe
Unitarity in periodic potentials: a renormalization group analysis
We explore the universal properties of interacting fermionic lattice systems,
mostly focusing on the development of pairing correlations from attractive
interactions. Using renormalization group we identify a large number of fixed
points and show that they correspond to resonant scattering in multiple
channels. Pairing resonances in finite-density band insulators occur between
quasiparticles and quasiholes living at different symmetry-related wavevectors
in the Brillouin zone. This allows a BCS-BEC crossover interpretation of both
Cooper and particle-hole pairing. We show that in two dimensions the run-away
flows of relevant attractive interactions lead to charged-boson-dominated low
energy dynamics in the insulating states, and superfluid transitions in bosonic
mean-field or XY universality classes. Analogous phenomena in higher dimensions
are restricted to the strong coupling limit, while at weak couplings the
transition is in the pair-breaking BCS class. The models discussed here can be
realized with ultra-cold gases of alkali atoms tuned to a broad Feshbach
resonance in an optical lattice, enabling experimental studies of pairing
correlations in insulators, especially in their universal regimes. In turn,
these simple and tractable models capture the emergence of fluctuation-driven
superconducting transitions in fermionic systems, which is of interest in the
context of high temperature superconductors.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, published versio
Creating maximally entangled atomic states in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We propose a protocol to create maximally entangled pairs, triplets,
quartiles, and other clusters of Bose condensed atoms starting from a
condensate in the Mott insulator state. The essential element is to drive
single atom Raman transitions using laser pulses. Our scheme is simple,
efficient, and can be readily applied to the recent experimental system as
reported by Greiner {\it et al.} [ Nature {\bf 413}, 44 (2002)].Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. revised version as to be publishe
Topological Winding and Unwinding in Metastable Bose-Einstein Condensates
Topological winding and unwinding in a quasi-one-dimensional metastable
Bose-Einstein condensate are shown to be manipulated by changing the strength
of interaction or the frequency of rotation. Exact diagonalization analysis
reveals that quasidegenerate states emerge spontaneously near the transition
point, allowing a smooth crossover between topologically distinct states. On a
mean-field level, the transition is accompanied by formation of grey solitons,
or density notches, which serve as an experimental signature of this
phenomenon.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Quench induced Mott insulator to superfluid quantum phase transition
Mott insulator to superfluid quenches have been used by recent experiments to
generate exotic superfluid phases. While the final Hamiltonian following the
sudden quench is that of a superfluid, it is not a priori clear how close the
final state of the system approaches the ground state of the superfluid
Hamiltonian. To understand the nature of the final state we calculate the
temporal evolution of the momentum distribution following a Mott insulator to
superfluid quench. Using the numerical infinite time-evolving block decimation
approach and the analytical rotor model approximation we establish that the one
and two dimensional Mott insulators following the quench equilibriate to
thermal states with spatially short-ranged coherence peaks in the final
momentum distribution and therefore are not strict superfluids. However, in
three dimensions we find a divergence in the momentum distribution indicating
the emergence of true superfluid order.Comment: 4.2 pages, 3 Figure
Large-Scale Schr\"odinger-Cat States and Majorana Bound States in Coupled Circuit-QED Systems
We have studied the low-lying excitations of a chain of coupled circuit-QED
systems, and report several intriguing properties of its two nearly degenerate
ground states. The ground states are Schr\"odinger cat states at a truly large
scale, involving maximal entanglement between the resonator and the qubit, and
are mathematically equivalent to Majorana bound states. With a suitable design
of physical qubits, they are protected against local fluctuations and
constitute a non-local qubit. Further, they can be probed and manipulated
coherently by attaching an empty resonator to one end of the circuit-QED chain.Comment: 5 pages; 2 figures; incorrect references corrected; typos correcte
Nonequilibrium dynamical renormalization group: Dynamical crossover from weak to infinite randomness in the transverse-field Ising chain
In this work we formulate the nonequilibrium dynamical renormalization group
(ndRG). The ndRG represents a general renormalization-group scheme for the
analytical description of the real-time dynamics of complex quantum many-body
systems. In particular, the ndRG incorporates time as an additional scale which
turns out to be important for the description of the long-time dynamics. It can
be applied to both translational invariant and disordered systems. As a
concrete application we study the real-time dynamics after a quench between two
quantum critical points of different universality classes. We achieve this by
switching on weak disorder in a one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model
initially prepared at its clean quantum critical point. By comparing to
numerically exact simulations for large systems we show that the ndRG is
capable of analytically capturing the full crossover from weak to infinite
randomness. We analytically study signatures of localization in both real space
and Fock space.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, extended presentation, version as publishe
Boson Core Compressibility
Strongly interacting atoms trapped in optical lattices can be used to explore
phase diagrams of Hubbard models. Spatial inhomogeneity due to trapping
typically obscures distinguishing observables. We propose that measures using
boson double occupancy avoid trapping effects to reveal key correlation
functions. We define a boson core compressibility and core superfluid stiffness
in terms of double occupancy. We use quantum Monte Carlo on the Bose-Hubbard
model to empirically show that these quantities intrinsically eliminate edge
effects to reveal correlations near the trap center. The boson core
compressibility offers a generally applicable tool that can be used to
experimentally map out phase transitions between compressible and
incompressible states.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figure
Weyl corrections to holographic conductivity
For conformal field theories which admit a dual gravitational description in
anti-de Sitter space, electrical transport properties, such as conductivity and
charge diffusion, are determined by the dynamics of a U(1) gauge field in the
bulk and thus obey universality relations at the classical level due to the
uniqueness of the Maxwell action. We analyze corrections to these transport
parameters due to higher-dimension operators in the bulk action, beyond the
leading Maxwell term, of which the most significant involves a coupling to the
bulk Weyl tensor. We show that the ensuing corrections to conductivity and the
diffusion constant break the universal relation with the U(1) central charge
observed at leading order, but are nonetheless subject to interesting bounds
associated with causality in the boundary CFT.Comment: 15 pages, v2: references adde
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