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The Two-Dimensional Disordered Boson Hubbard Model: Evidence for a Direct Mott Insulator-to-Superfluid Transition and Localization in the Bose Glass Phase

Abstract

We investigate the Bose glass phase and the insulator-to-superfluid transition in the two-dimensional disordered boson Hubbard model in the Villain representation via Monte Carlo simulations. In the Bose glass phase the probability distribution of the local susceptibility is found to have a 1/χ21/ \chi^2 tail and the imaginary time Green's function decays algebraically C(τ)τ1C(\tau) \sim \tau^{-1}, giving rise to a divergent global susceptibility. By considering the participation ratio it is shown that the excitations in the Bose glass phase are fully localized and a scaling law is established. For commensurate boson densities we find a direct Mott insulator to superfluid transition without an intervening Bose glass phase for weak disorder. For this transition we obtain the critical exponents z=1,ν=0.7±0.1z=1, \nu=0.7\pm 0.1 and η=0.1±0.1\eta = 0.1 \pm 0.1, which agree with those for the classical three-dimensional XY model without disorder. This indicates that disorder is irrelevant at the tip of the Mott-lobes and that here the inequality ν2/d\nu\ge2/d is violated.Comment: 15 pages RevTeX, 18 postscript-figures include

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    Last time updated on 03/01/2020