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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 131(8): 083601, 2023 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37683144

ABSTRACT

The Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson theory of phase transitions precludes a continuous transition between two phases that spontaneously break distinct symmetries. However, quantum mechanical effects can intertwine the symmetries, giving rise to an exotic phenomenon called deconfined quantum criticality (DQC). In this Letter, we study the ground state phase diagram of a one-dimensional array of individually trapped neutral atoms interacting strongly via Rydberg states, and demonstrate through extensive numerical simulations that it hosts a variety of symmetry-breaking phases and their transitions including DQC. We show how an enlarged, emergent continuous symmetry arises at the DQCs, which can be experimentally observed in the joint distribution of two distinct order parameters, obtained within measurement snapshots in the standard computational basis. Our findings highlight quantum simulators of Rydberg atoms not only as promising platforms to experimentally realize such exotic phenomena, but also as unique ones allowing access to physical properties not obtainable in traditional experiments.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(21): 215701, 2022 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687458

ABSTRACT

It was recently realized that the three-dimensional O(N) model possesses an extraordinary boundary universality class for a finite range of N≥2. For a given N, the existence and universal properties of this class are predicted to be controlled by certain amplitudes of the normal universality class, where one applies an explicit symmetry breaking field to the boundary. In this Letter, we study the normal universality class for N=2, 3 using Monte Carlo simulations on an improved lattice model and extract these universal amplitudes. Our results are in good agreement with direct Monte Carlo studies of the extraordinary universality class serving as a nontrivial quantitative check of the connection between the normal and extraordinary classes.

3.
Science ; 352(6282): 197-201, 2016 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27124453

ABSTRACT

In a two-dimensional electron gas under a strong magnetic field, correlations generate emergent excitations distinct from electrons. It has been predicted that "composite fermions"--bound states of an electron with two magnetic flux quanta--can experience zero net magnetic field and form a Fermi sea. Using infinite-cylinder density matrix renormalization group numerical simulations, we verify the existence of this exotic Fermi sea, but find that the phase exhibits particle-hole symmetry. This is self-consistent only if composite fermions are massless Dirac particles, similar to the surface of a topological insulator. Exploiting this analogy, we observe the suppression of 2k(F) backscattering, a characteristic of Dirac particles. Thus, the phenomenology of Dirac fermions is also relevant to two-dimensional electron gases in the quantum Hall regime.

4.
Science ; 338(6114): 1606-9, 2012 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23258893

ABSTRACT

The quantum theory of antiferromagnetism in metals is necessary for our understanding of numerous intermetallic compounds of widespread interest. In these systems, a quantum critical point emerges as external parameters (such as chemical doping) are varied. Because of the strong coupling nature of this critical point and the "sign problem" plaguing numerical quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods, its theoretical understanding is still incomplete. Here, we show that the universal low-energy theory for the onset of antiferromagnetism in a metal can be realized in lattice models, which are free from the sign problem and hence can be simulated efficiently with QMC. Our simulations show Fermi surface reconstruction and unconventional spin-singlet superconductivity across the critical point.

5.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 24(29): 294205, 2012 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22773369

ABSTRACT

The critical theory of the onset of antiferromagnetism in metals, with concomitant Fermi surface reconstruction, has recently been shown to be strongly coupled in two spatial dimensions. The onset of unconventional superconductivity near this critical point is reviewed: it involves a subtle interplay between the breakdown of fermionic quasiparticle excitations on the Fermi surface and the strong pairing glue provided by the antiferromagnetic fluctuations. The net result is a logarithm-squared enhancement of the pairing vertex for generic Fermi surfaces, with a universal dimensionless coefficient independent of the strength of interactions, which is expected to lead to superconductivity at the scale of the Fermi energy. We also discuss the possibility that the antiferromagnetic critical point can be replaced by an intermediate 'fractionalized Fermi liquid' phase, in which there is Fermi surface reconstruction but no long-range antiferromagnetic order. We discuss the relevance of this phase to the underdoped cuprates and the heavy fermion materials.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 101(18): 187206, 2008 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18999862

ABSTRACT

We study the textures of generalized "charge densities" (scalar objects invariant under time reversal), in the vicinity of nonmagnetic impurities in square-lattice quantum antiferromagnets, by order parameter field theories. Our central finding is the structure of the vortex in the generalized density wave order parameter centered at the nonmagnetic impurity. Using exact numerical data from quantum Monte Carlo simulations on an antiferromagnetic spin model, we are able to verify the results of our field theoretic study. We extend our phenomenological approach to the period-4 bond-centered density wave found in the underdoped cuprates.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 92(15): 151102, 2004 Apr 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15169277

ABSTRACT

In a recent paper by Link, it was pointed out that the standard picture of the neutron star core composed of a mixture of a neutron superfluid and a proton type-II superconductor is inconsistent with observations of a long period precession in isolated pulsars. In the following we will show that an appropriate treatment of the interacting two-component superfluid (made of neutron and proton Cooper pairs), when the structure of proton vortices is strongly modified, may dramatically change the standard picture, resulting in a type-I superconductor. In this case the magnetic field is expelled from the superconducting regions of the neutron star, leading to the formation of the intermediate state when alternating domains of superconducting matter and normal matter coexist.

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