Format results
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Haldane-like antiferromagnetic spin chain in the large anisotropy limit
Manu Paranjape Université de Montréal
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Geometric response of FQH states
Andrey Gromov University of California, Berkeley
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Braiding statistics of loops in three spatial dimensions
PIRSA:14120034 -
Tensor Networks for nonabelian Gauge Theory
Ashley Milsted California Institute of Technology
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Spin-charge scattering in Luttinger Liquids
Alex Levchenko Michigan State University (MSU)
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Numerical Study of a Bosonic Topological Insulator in Three Dimensions
Scott Geraedts California Institute of Technology
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Bulk Entanglement Spectrum: From Topological States to Quantum Criticality
Timothy Hsieh Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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Irreversibility and Entanglement Spectrum Statistics in Quantum Circuits
Eduardo Mucciolo University of Central Florida
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Haldane-like antiferromagnetic spin chain in the large anisotropy limit
Manu Paranjape Université de Montréal
We consider the one dimensional, periodic spin chain with $N$ sites, similar to the one studied by Haldane \cite{hal}, however in the opposite limit of very large anisotropy and small nearest neighbour, anti-ferromagnetic exchange coupling between the spins, which are of large magnitude $s$. For a chain with an even number of sites we show that actually the ground state is non degenerate and given by a superposition of the two Néel states, due to quantum spin tunnelling. With an odd number of sites, the Néel state must necessarily contain a soliton. The position of the soliton is arbitrary thus the ground state is $N$-fold degenerate. This set of states reorganizes into a band. We show that this occurs at order $2s$ in perturbation theory. The ground state is non-degenerate for integer spin, but degenerate for half-odd integer spin as is required by Kramer's theorem \cite{kram}. arXiv:1404.6706 , Phys.Lett. A378 (2014) 3066-3069; arXiv:1304.3734 Phys.Rev. B88 (2013) 22, 220403
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The theory of cluster Mott insulators: charge fluctuations and spin liquids
I will present recent theoretical work on cluster Mott insulators (CMI) in which interesting physics such as emergent charge lattices, charge fractionalization and quantum spin liquids are proposed. For the anisotropic Kagome system like LiZn2Mo3O8, we find two distinct CMIs, type-I and type-II, can arise from the repulsive interactions. In type-I CMI, the electrons are localized in one half of the triangle clusters of the Kagome system while the electrons in the type-II CMI are localized in every triangle cluster. Both CMIs are U(1) quantum spin liquids (QSL) in the weak Mott regime with a spinon Fermi surface and gapped charge excitations. In type-II CMI, however, the charge fluctuations lead to a long-range plaquette charge order that breaks the lattice symmetry, gives rise to an emergent charge lattice and reconstructs the mean-field spinon band structure of the underlying U(1) QSL. Such a reconstruction gives a consistent prediction of the "fractional spin susceptibility" that is observed in LiZn2Mo3O8. For the pyrochlore system, the CMI can further support a charge fractionalization with an emergent gauge photon in the charge sector in addition to the spin fractionalization in the spin sector.
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Viscous and Thermal Transport in Topological Phases
One hallmark of topological phases with broken time reversal symmetry is the appearance of quantized non-dissipative transport coefficients, the archetypical example being the quantized Hall conductivity in quantum Hall states. Here I will talk about two other non-dissipative transport coefficients that appear in such systems - the Hall viscosity and the thermal Hall conductivity. In the first part of the talk, I will start by reviewing previous results concerning the Hall viscosity, including its relation to a topological invariant known as the shift. Next, I will show how the Hall viscosity can be computed from a Kubo formula. For Galilean invariant systems, the Kubo formula implies a relationship between the viscosity and conductivity tensors which may have relevance for experiment. In the second part of the talk, I will discuss the thermal Hall conductivity, its relation to the central charge of the edge theory, and in particular the absence of a bulk contribution to the thermal Hall current. I will do this by constructing a low-energy effective theory in a curved non-relativistic background, allowing for torsion. I will show that the bulk contribution to the thermal current takes the form of an "energy magnetization" current, and hence show that it does not contribute to heat transport.
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Geometric response of FQH states
Andrey Gromov University of California, Berkeley
Two-dimensional interacting electron gas in strong transverse magnetic field forms a collective state -- incompressible electron liquid, known as fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state. FQH states are genuinely new states of matter with long range topological order. Their primary observable characteristics are the absence of dissipation and quantization of the transverse electro-magnetic response known Hall conductance. In addition to quantized electromagnetic response FQH states are characterized by quantized geometric responses such as Hall viscosity and thermal Hall conductance.
I will show how to derive the effective action for various Abelian and non-Abelian FQH states on a curved space. In particular, I will derive the quantized universal responses to the changes in geometry of space. These responses are described by Chern-Simons-type terms. It will be shown that in order to obtain the responses in a self consistent way one has to take into account the framing anomaly of the quantum Chern-Simons(-Witten) theory. This peculiar phenomenon illustrates the failure of a classically topological theory to remain topological at the quantum level.
If time permits I will comment on the coupling of non-relativistic systems to the space-time geometry. Using the appropriate geometry I will write an effective action describing the bulk energy and thermal Hall conductances. From this effective action it will be clear that these response functions are neither universal nor topologically protected. -
Braiding statistics of loops in three spatial dimensions
PIRSA:14120034In two spatial dimensions, it is well known that particle-like excitations can come with fractional statistics, beyond the usual dichotomy of Bose versus Fermi statistics. In this talk, I move one dimension higher to three spatial dimensions, and study loop-like objects instead of point-like particles. Just like particles in 2D, loops can exhibit interesting fractional braiding statistics in 3D. I will talk about loop braiding statistics in the context of symmetry protected topological phases, which is a generalization of topological insulators.
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Tensor Networks for nonabelian Gauge Theory
Ashley Milsted California Institute of Technology
We present an analytic, gauge invariant tensor network ansatz for the ground state of lattice Yang-Mills theory for nonabelian gauge groups. It naturally takes the form of a MERA, where the top level is the strong coupling limit of the lattice theory. Each layer performs a fine-graining operation defined in a fixed way followed by an optional step of adiabatic evolution, resulting in the ground state at an intermediate coupling. The ansatz is very much in the spirit of Kogut and Susskind's Hamiltonian approach to understanding confinement by starting from the strong coupling limit and perturbing, but exploiting a tensor network structure to go beyond perturbative approaches.
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Fractionalization from Crystallography
A featureless insulator is a gapped phase of matter that does not exhibit fractionalization or other exotic physics, and thus has a unique ground state. The classic albeit non-interacting example is an electronic band insulator. A standard textbook argument tells us that band insulators require an even number of electrons -- an integer number for each spin -- per unit cell. I will explore the converse question: given such an 'integer filling', is a featureless insulating state possible? I will demonstrate that in most three-dimensional crystals, an insulating ground state cannot be unique -- and hence cannot be featureless -- except at certain special fillings fixed by the crystalline space group. This result, which remains valid more generally for interacting systems of fermions, bosons, or spins (as long as they have a conserved U(1) charge), relies on a combination of topological 'flux insertion' arguments and elementary crystallographic ideas. I will explore its implications through examples ranging from band theory, where it leads to the identification of protected semimetals, to frustrated magnetism, where it suggests new venues for spin liquid physics.
References: S.A. Parameswaran, A.M. Turner, D.P. Arovas and A. Vishwanath, Nature Physics 9, 299 (2013).
(see also related work in PNAS 110, 16378 (2013) and Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 125301 (2013).) -
Spin-charge scattering in Luttinger Liquids
Alex Levchenko Michigan State University (MSU)
I will discuss the violation of spin-charge separation in generic Luttinger liquids and investigate its effect on the relaxation, thermal and electrical transport of genuine spin-1/2 electron liquids in ballistic quantum wires. We will identify basic scattering processes compatible with the symmetry of the problem and conservation laws that lead to the decay of plasmons into the spin modes and also discuss Brownian backscattering of spin excitations. I will present a closed set of coupled kinetic equations for the spin-charge excitations and solve the problem of electrical and thermal conductance of interacting electrons for an arbitrary relation between the quantum wire length and spin-charge thermalization length.
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Numerical Study of a Bosonic Topological Insulator in Three Dimensions
Scott Geraedts California Institute of Technology
We construct a model which realizes a (3+1)-dimensional symmetry-protected topological phase of bosons with U(1) charge conservation and time reversal symmetry, envisioned by A. Vishwanath and T. Senthil [PRX 4 011016]. Our model works by introducing an additional spin degree of freedom, and binding its hedgehogs to a species of charged bosons. We study the model using Monte Carlo and determine its bulk phase diagram; the phase where the bound states of hedgehogs and charges condense is the topological phase, and we demonstrate this by observing a Witten effect. We also study the surface phase diagram on a (2+1)-dimensional boundary between the topological and trivial insulators. We find a number of exotic phases on the surface, including exotic superfluids, a phase with a Hall conductivity quantized to half the value possible in 2D, and a phase with intrinsic topological order. We also find a new bulk phase with intrinsic topological order. -
Bulk Entanglement Spectrum: From Topological States to Quantum Criticality
Timothy Hsieh Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
A quantum phase transition is usually achieved by tuning physical parameters in a Hamiltonian at zero temperature. Here, we demonstrate that the ground state of a topological phase itself encodes critical properties of its transition to a trivial phase. To extract this information, we introduce a partition of the system into two subsystems both of which extend throughout the bulk in all directions. The resulting bulk entanglement spectrum (BES) has a low-lying part that resembles the excitation spectrum of a bulk Hamiltonian, which allows us to probe a topological phase transition from a single wavefunction by tuning either the geometry of the partition or the entanglement temperature. As an example, this remarkable correspondence between topological phase transition and entanglement criticality is rigorously established for integer quantum Hall states. We also implement BES using tensor networks, derive the universality classes of topological phase transitions from the spin-1 chain Haldane phase, and demonstrate that the AKLT wavefunction (and its generalizations) remarkably contains critical six-vertex (and in general eight-vertex) models within it. -
Irreversibility and Entanglement Spectrum Statistics in Quantum Circuits
Eduardo Mucciolo University of Central Florida
We show that for a system evolving unitarily under a stochastic quantum circuit, the notions of irreversibility, universality of computation, and entanglement are closely related. As the state of the system evolves from an initial product state, it becomes increasingly entangled until entanglement reaches a maximum. We define irreversibility as the failure to find a circuit that disentangles a maximally entangled state. We show that irreversibility occurs when maximally entangled states are generated with a quantum circuit formed by gates from a universal quantum computation set. We find that irreversibility is also associated to a Wigner-Dyson statistics in the fluctuations of spacings between adjacent eigenvalues of the system’s reduced density matrix. In contrast, when the system is evolved with a non-universal set of gates, the statistics of the entanglement spacing deviates from Wigner-Dyson and the disentangling algorithm succeeds. We discuss how these findings open a new way to characterize non-integrability in quantum systems. -
Conformal field theories at non-zero temperature: operator product expansions, Monte Carlo, and holography
We discuss properties of 2-point functions in CFTs in 2+1D at finite temperature. For concreteness, we focus on those involving conserved flavour currents, in particular on the associated conductivity. At frequencies much greater than the temperature, ω >> T, the ω dependence of the conductivity can be computed from the operator product expansion (OPE) between the currents and operators which acquire a non-zero expectation value at T > 0. Such results are found to be in excellent agreement with quantum Monte Carlo studies of the O(2) Wilson-Fisher CFT. Results for the conductivity and other observables are also obtained in vector 1/N expansions. We match these large ω results to the corresponding correlators of holographic representations of the CFT: the holographic approach then allows us to extrapolate to small ω/T. Other holographic studies implicitly only used the OPE between the currents and the energy-momentum tensor, and this yields the correct leading large ω behavior for a large class of CFTs. However, for the Wilson-Fisher CFT a relevant “thermal” operator must also be considered, and then consistency with the Monte Carlo results is obtained without a previously needed ad hoc rescaling of the T value [1]. We also use the OPE to prove sum rules obeyed by the conductivity. **In collaboration with A. Katz, S. Sachdev and E. Sørensen** [1] WWK, E. Sørensen, S. Sachdev, Nat. Phys. 10, 361 (2014)