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Quantum phase transitions in atomic gases
and condensed matter
Subir Sachdev
Science 286, 2479 (1999).
Quantum Phase Transitions
Cambridge University Press
Transparencies online at
http://pantheon.yale.edu/~subir
What is a quantum phase transition ?
Non-analyticity in ground state properties as a function of
some control parameter g
E
E
g
True level crossing:
Usually a first-order transition
g
Avoided level crossing which
becomes sharp in the infinite
volume limit:
second-order transition
Why study quantum phase transitions ?
T
Quantum-critical
gc
• Theory for a quantum system with strong correlations:
describe phases on either side of gc by expanding in
deviation from the quantum critical point.
g
• Critical point is a novel state of matter without
quasiparticle excitations
• Critical excitations control dynamics in the wide
quantum-critical region at non-zero temperatures.
Important property of ground state at g=gc :
temporal and spatial scale invariance;
characteristic energy scale at other values of g: ~ g g c
z
Outline
I.
The quantum Ising chain.
II.
The superfluid-insulator transition
III.
Quantum transitions without local order parameters:
fractionalization.
IV.
Conclusions
I. Quantum Ising Chain
Degrees of freedom: j 1
N qubits, N "large"
,
or
j
1
j
2
j
j
j
, j
1
j
2
Hamiltonian of decoupled qubits:
H 0 J xj
j
j
j
2J
j
Coupling between qubits:
H1 Jg zj zj 1
j
j
j
j 1
Prefers neighboring qubits
are either
j
j 1
or
j
(not entangled)
Full Hamiltonian
H H 0 H1
leads to entangled states at g of order unity
j 1
j 1
Weakly-coupled qubits
Ground state:
G
g
1
g
2
Lowest excited states:
j
j
Coupling between qubits creates “flipped-spin” quasiparticle states at momentum p
p e
p
ipx j
j
j
pa
2
Excitation energy p 4 gJ sin 2
O g
2
Excitation gap 2 J 2 gJ O g 2
a
p
Entire spectrum can be constructed out of multi-quasiparticle states
a
Dynamic Structure Factor S ( p, ) :
Weakly-coupled qubits g
Cross-section to flip a to a (or vice versa)
while transferring energy and momentum p
S p,
Z p
Quasiparticle pole
Three quasiparticle
continuum
~3
Structure holds to all orders in g
At T 0, collisions between quasiparticles broaden pole to
a Lorentzian of width 1 where the phase coherence time
is given by
1
2k B T
e kBT
S. Sachdev and A.P. Young, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 2220 (1997)
1
Strongly-coupled qubits g
Ground states:
G
1
1
2g
Ferromagnetic moment
N0 G z G 0
Second state G obtained by
G and G mix only at order g N
Lowest excited states: domain walls
dj
j
Coupling between qubits creates new “domainwall” quasiparticle states at momentum p
p e
ipx j
p
dj
j
pa
1
Excitation energy p 4 J sin 2
O g
2
Excitation gap 2 gJ 2 J O g 1
a
p
a
Dynamic Structure Factor S ( p, ) :
Strongly-coupled qubits g
1
Cross-section to flip a to a (or vice versa)
while transferring energy and momentum p
S p,
N 02 2 p
2
Two domain-wall
continuum
~2
Structure holds to all orders in 1/g
At T 0, motion of domain walls leads to a finite phase coherence time ,
and broadens coherent peak to a width 1 where
1
S. Sachdev and A.P. Young, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 2220 (1997)
2k B T
e kBT
Entangled states at g of order unity
Z ~ gc g
1/ 4
“Flipped-spin”
Quasiparticle
weight Z
A.V. Chubukov, S. Sachdev, and J.Ye,
Phys. Rev. B 49, 11919 (1994)
gc
g
N0 ~ g gc
1/ 8
Ferromagnetic
moment N0
P. Pfeuty Annals of Physics, 57, 79 (1970)
gc
g
Excitation
energy gap
~ g gc
gc
g
Dynamic Structure Factor S ( p, ) :
Critical coupling
g gc
Cross-section to flip a to a (or vice versa)
while transferring energy and momentum p
S p,
~ c p
c p
7 /8
No quasiparticles --- dissipative critical continuum
Crossovers at nonzero temperature
Quasiclassical
dynamics
Quasiclassical
dynamics
( )
i
z
z
i t
dt
t
,
0
e
j
k
k
0
A
7/4
T 1 i ...
Phase coherence time given by
k T
2 tan B
16
1
S. Sachdev and J. Ye,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 69, 2411 (1992).
S. Sachdev and A.P. Young,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 2220 (1997).
II. The Superfluid-Insulator transition
Boson Hubbard model
Degrees of freedom: Bosons, b†j , hopping between the
sites, j , of a lattice, with short-range repulsive interactions.
U
†
H t bi b j - n j n j ( n j 1)
2 j
ij
j
nj b b
†
j j
M.PA. Fisher, P.B. Weichmann, G.
Grinstein, and D.S. Fisher Phys.
Rev. B 40, 546 (1989).
For small U/t, ground state is a superfluid BEC with
superfluid density
density of bosons
What is the ground state for large U/t ?
Typically, the ground state remains a superfluid, but with
superfluid density
density of bosons
The superfluid density evolves smoothly from large values at
small U/t, to small values at large U/t, and there is no quantum
phase transition at any intermediate value of U/t.
(In systems with Galilean invariance and at zero temperature,
superfluid density=density of bosons always, independent of the
strength of the interactions)
What is the ground state for large U/t ?
Incompressible, insulating ground states, with zero
superfluid density, appear at special commensurate densities
nj 3
nj 7 / 2
t
U
Ground state has “density wave” order, which
spontaneously breaks lattice symmetries
Excitations of the insulator: infinitely long-lived, finite energy
quasiparticles and quasiholes
p2
Energy of quasi-particles/holes: p ,h p p ,h
2m*p ,h
Boson Green's function G ( p, ) :
Insulating ground state
Cross-section to add a boson
while transferring energy and momentum p
G p,
Z p
Quasiparticle pole
~3
Continuum of
two quasiparticles +
one quasihole
Similar result for quasi-hole excitations obtained by removing a boson
Entangled states at g t / U of order unity
Z ~ gc g
Quasiparticle
weight Z
gc
g
rs ~ g gc
Superfluid
density rs
gc
( d z 2)
g
p ,h ~ gc g for g gc
Excitation
energy gap
p ,h =0 for g gc
gc
g
Crossovers at nonzero temperature
Quasiclassical
dynamics
Quasiclassical
dynamics
Relaxational dynamics ("Bose molasses") with
phase coherence/relaxation time given by
1
Universal number
k BT
Q2
Conductivity (in d=2) =
h kBT
1 K 20.9kHz
S. Sachdev and J. Ye,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 69, 2411 (1992).
K. Damle and S. Sachdev
Phys. Rev. B 56, 8714 (1997).
universal function
M.P.A. Fisher, G. Girvin, and G. Grinstein, Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 587 (1990).
K. Damle and S. Sachdev Phys. Rev. B 56, 8714 (1997).
II. Quantum transitions without local order parameters:
fractionalization
S=1/2 spins on coupled 2-leg ladders
J '''
J ''
H J ij Si S j
ij
e.g. SrCu2O3
J
J'
Ground state for J large
S=0 quantum paramagnet
1
2
Elementary excitations of paramagnet
For large J, there is a stable S=1, neutral,
quasiparticle excitation: its two S=1/2
constituent spins are confined by a linear
attractive potential
S p,
Elementary excitations of paramagnet
S p,
P.W. Anderson, Science 235, 1196 (1987).
For smaller J, there can be a confinementdeconfinement transition at which the S=1/2 spinons
are liberated: these are neutral, S=1/2 quasiparticles
The gap to all excitations with non-zero S remains finite
across this transition, but the gap to spin singlet excitations
vanishes. There is no local order parameter and the
transition is described by a Z2 gauge theory
N. Read and S. Sachdev, Phys. Rev. Lett. 66, 1773 (1991).
X.G. Wen, Phys. Rev. B 44, 2664 (1991).
T. Senthil and M. P. A. Fisher Phys. Rev. B 62, 7850 (2000).
Fractionalization in atomic gases
= Two F=1 atoms in a spin singlet pair
“Ordinary” spin-singlet insulator
Quasiparticle excitation
Quasiparticle carries both spin and “charge”
E. Demler and F. Zhou,
cond-mat/0104409
Quasiparticle excitation in a fractionalized spin-singlet insulator
Quasiparticle carries “charge” but no spin
Spin-charge
separation
Conclusions
I.
Study of quantum phase transitions offers a controlled and systematic method of
understanding many-body systems in a region of strong entanglement.
II.
Atomic gases offer many exciting opportunities to study quantum phase
transitions because of ease by which system parameters can be continuously
tuned.
III.
Promising outlook for studying quantum systems with “fractionalized”
excitations (only observed so far in quantum Hall systems in condensed matter).