Fractonic Luttinger Liquids and Supersolids in a Constrained Bose-Hubbard Model

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum many-body systems with fracton constraints are widely conjectured to exhibit unconventional low-energy phases of matter. In this work, we demonstrate the existence of a variety of such exotic quantum phases in the ground states of a dipole-moment conserving Bose-Hubbard model in one dimension. For integer boson fillings, we perform a mapping of the system to a model of microscopic local dipoles, which are composites of fractons. We apply a combination of low-energy field theory and large-scale tensor network simulations to demonstrate the emergence of a novel dipole Luttinger liquid phase. At non-integer fillings our numerical approach shows an intriguing compressible state described by a quantum Lifshitz model in which charge density-wave order coexists with dipole long-range order and superfluidity -- a `dipole supersolid'. While this supersolid state may eventually be unstable against lattice effects in the thermodynamic limit, its numerical robustness is remarkable. We discuss potential experimental implications of our results.

*We acknowledge support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) under Germany's Excellence Strategy--EXC--2111--390814868 and DFG grants No. KN1254/1-2, KN1254/2-1, the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Grant Agreement No. 851161), as well as the Munich Quantum Valley, which is supported by the Bavarian state government with funds from the Hightech Agenda Bayern Plus. EA is supported by the NSF QLCI program through grant number OMA-2016245.

Publication: P. Zechmann, E. Altman, M. Knap, and J. Feldmeier, Fractonic Luttinger Liquids and Supersolids in a Constrained Bose-Hubbard Model, arXiv (to appear Oct 2022)

Presenters

  • Johannes Feldmeier

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Johannes Feldmeier

    • Harvard University
  • Philip Zechmann

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Ehud Altman

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Michael Knap

    • TU Munich
    • Tech Univ Muenchen