Lieb-Schultz-Mattis (LSM) theorems provide powerful constraints on the
emergibility problem, i.e. whether a quantum phase or phase transition can
emerge in a many-body system. We derive the topological partition functions
that characterize the LSM constraints in spin systems with GsβΓGintβ
symmetry, where Gsβ is an arbitrary space group in one or two spatial
dimensions, and Gintβ is any internal symmetry whose projective
representations are classified by Z2kβ with k an integer. We then
apply these results to study the emergibility of a class of exotic quantum
critical states, including the well-known deconfined quantum critical point
(DQCP), U(1) Dirac spin liquid (DSL), and the recently proposed
non-Lagrangian Stiefel liquid. These states can emerge as a consequence of the
competition between a magnetic state and a non-magnetic state. We identify all
possible realizations of these states on systems with SO(3)ΓZ2Tβ internal symmetry and either p6m or p4m lattice symmetry.
Many interesting examples are discovered, including a DQCP adjacent to a
ferromagnet, stable DSLs on square and honeycomb lattices, and a class of
quantum critical spin-quadrupolar liquids of which the most relevant spinful
fluctuations carry spin-2. In particular, there is a realization of
spin-quadrupolar DSL that is beyond the usual parton construction. We further
use our formalism to analyze the stability of these states under
symmetry-breaking perturbations, such as spin-orbit coupling. As a concrete
example, we find that a DSL can be stable in a recently proposed candidate
material, NaYbO2β.Comment: 23 pages of main text + appendices + ancillary file