1,413 research outputs found
Comment on ``Quantum Phase Transition of the Randomly Diluted Heisenberg Antiferromagnet on a Square Lattice''
In Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 4204 (2000) (cond-mat/9905379), Kato et al. presented
quantum Monte Carlo results indicating that the critical concentration of
random non-magnetic sites in the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic Heisenberg
model equals the classical percolation density; pc=0.407254. The data also
suggested a surprising dependence of the critical exponents on the spin S of
the magnetic sites, with a gradual approach to the classical percolation
exponents as S goes to infinity. I here argue that the exponents in fact are
S-independent and equal to those of classical percolation. The apparent
S-dependent behavior found by Kato et al. is due to temperature effects in the
simulations as well as a quantum effect that masks the true asymptotic scaling
behavior for small lattices.Comment: Comment on Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 4204 (2000), by K. Kato et al.; 1
page, 1 figur
Loop updates for variational and projector quantum Monte Carlo simulations in the valence-bond basis
We show how efficient loop updates, originally developed for Monte Carlo
simulations of quantum spin systems at finite temperature, can be combined with
a ground-state projector scheme and variational calculations in the valence
bond basis. The methods are formulated in a combined space of spin z-components
and valence bonds. Compared to schemes formulated purely in the valence bond
basis, the computational effort is reduced from up to O(N^2) to O(N) for
variational calculations, where N is the system size, and from O(m^2) to O(m)
for projector simulations, where m>> N is the projection power. These
improvements enable access to ground states of significantly larger lattices
than previously. We demonstrate the efficiency of the approach by calculating
the sublattice magnetization M_s of the two-dimensional Heisenberg model to
high precision, using systems with up to 256*256 spins. Extrapolating the
results to the thermodynamic limit gives M_s=0.30743(1). We also discuss
optimized variational amplitude-product states, which were used as trial states
in the projector simulations, and compare results of projecting different types
of trial states.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures. v2: Significantly expanded, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Spin nematic ground state of the triangular lattice S=1 biquadratic model
Motivated by the spate of recent experimental and theoretical interest in
Mott insulating S=1 triangular lattice magnets, we consider a model S=1
Hamiltonian on a triangular lattice interacting with rotationally symmetric
biquadratic interactions. We show that the partition function of this model can
be expressed in terms of configurations of three colors of tightly-packed,
closed loops with {\em non-negative} weights, which allows for efficient
quantum Monte Carlo sampling on large lattices. We find the ground state has
spin nematic order, i.e. it spontaneously breaks spin rotation symmetry but
preserves time reversal symmetry. We present accurate results for the
parameters of the low energy field theory, as well as finite-temperature
thermodynamic functions
Order-Disorder Transition in a Two-Layer Quantum Antiferromagnet
We have studied the antiferromagnetic order -- disorder transition occurring
at in a 2-layer quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet as the inter-plane
coupling is increased. Quantum Monte Carlo results for the staggered structure
factor in combination with finite-size scaling theory give the critical ratio
between the inter-plane and in-plane coupling constants.
The critical behavior is consistent with the 3D classical Heisenberg
universality class. Results for the uniform magnetic susceptibility and the
correlation length at finite temperature are compared with recent predictions
for the 2+1-dimensional nonlinear -model. The susceptibility is found
to exhibit quantum critical behavior at temperatures significantly higher than
the correlation length.Comment: 11 pages (5 postscript figures available upon request), Revtex 3.
Monte Carlo Simulations of Quantum Spin Systems in the Valence Bond Basis
We discuss a projector Monte Carlo method for quantum spin models formulated
in the valence bond basis, using the S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet as an
example. Its singlet ground state can be projected out of an arbitrary basis
state as the trial state, but a more rapid convergence can be obtained using a
good variational state. As an alternative to first carrying out a time
consuming variational Monte Carlo calculation, we show that a very good trial
state can be generated in an iterative fashion in the course of the simulation
itself. We also show how the properties of the valence bond basis enable
calculations of quantities that are difficult to obtain with the standard basis
of Sz eigenstates. In particular, we discuss quantities involving
finite-momentum states in the triplet sector, such as the dispersion relation
and the spectral weight of the lowest triplet.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, for the proceedings of "Computer Simulation
Studies in Condensed Matter Physics XX
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