Properties of classical clock models and possibilities for their quantum simulation

ORAL

Abstract

The q-state clock model is a classical spin model that corresponds to the Ising model (when q = 2) and the XY model (when q goes to infinity). The integer-q clock model has been studied extensively and has been shown to have a single phase transition when q = 2,3,4 and two phase transitions when q > 4. We investigate a class of clock models for non-integer q using Monte Carlo (MC) and tensor renormalization group (TRG) methods, and we find that the model with non-integer q has two phase transitions with one of them possibly in the Ising universality class. In this model, thermodynamic quantities appear to vary smoothly with q as q approaches an integer from below. However, the appearance of an additional spin state when q crosses an integer results in an abrupt change in the thermodynamic quantities. The model with non-integer q serves as a testbed for TRG methods and has interesting features which already appear at small lattice sizes, making this model a candidate for study on near-term quantum simulators and in particular Rydberg atom devices.

*We thank members of the QuLAT collaboration, for useful discussions and comments. This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under Award Number DE-SC0019139.

Presenters

  • Leon Hostetler

    • Michigan State University

Authors

  • Leon Hostetler

    • Michigan State University
  • Ryo Sakai

    • Univ of Iowa
    • The University of Iowa
  • Jin Zhang

    • Univ of Iowa
    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
    • The University of Iowa
    • University of Iowa
  • Judah F Unmuth-Yockey

    • Fermilab
    • Syracuse University
  • Alexei Bazavov

    • MSU
    • Michigan State University
  • Yannick Meurice

    • Univ of Iowa
    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
    • The University of Iowa
    • Physics, University of Iowa