Boundary phenomena and phase transitions in strongly correlated one dimensional systems.

ORAL

Abstract

One dimensional quantum systems exhibit many interesting physical phenomena as a result of strong correlations. The gapped systems with symmetries exhibit exotic phases and are categorized as spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) or symmetry protected topological (SPT) phases. Systems with SSB have non vanishing local order parameter and a discrete symmetry is spontaneously broken leading to degenerate pairing in the spectrum. In contrast, systems with SPT exhibit non-local order parameter and robust ground state degeneracy associated with protected fractionalized gapless excitations at the edges. In this work we consider systems belonging to both classes: the spin 1/2 XXZ chain which exhibits SSB and the charge conserving superconductor which exhibits SPT, and study them under the effect of symmetry breaking fields at the edges. We find that these systems exhibit a rich phase diagram and show that certain phases display spin fractionalization associated with strong Majorana zero modes at the edges. We then consider spin 1/2 Heisenberg XXX chain, a gapless system that does not fall into either the SPT or SSB classes. We show that it exhibits a rich phase diagram and contains zero modes which arise at high energies. We show that in all three systems described above, the Hilbert space is comprised of a certain number of towers of excited states, and that they exhibit a new type of phase transition named 'Hilbert space' or 'eigenstate' phase transition where the number of towers of the Hilbert space changes as result of the application of the edge fields.

*J.H.P. and J.L. are partially supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Grant No. FA9550-20-1-0136 and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation through a Sloan Research Fellowship. J.H.P. acknowledges the Aspen Center for Physics, where some of this work was discussed, which is supported by National Science Foundation grant PHY-1607611. P.R.P. acknowledges Rutgers University Physics and Astronomy department, where most part of the work was carried out and was supported by Rutgers HEERF Fellowship.

Publication: P. R. Pasnoori, N. Andrei, and P. Azaria, Phys. Rev. B 102, 214511 (2020).
P. R. Pasnoori, N. Andrei, and P. Azaria, Phys. Rev. B 104, 134519 (2021).
P. R. Pasnoori, J. Lee, J. H. Pixley, N. Andrei and P. Azaria, preprint (2022).
P. R. Pasnoori, Y. Tang, J. Lee, J. H. Pixley, N. Andrei and P. Azaria, preprint (2022)

Presenters

  • Parameshwar R Pasnoori

    • University of Maryland

Authors

  • Parameshwar R Pasnoori

    • University of Maryland
  • Junhyun Lee

    • Rutgers University
  • Jedediah H Pixley

    • Rutgers University, New Brunswick
    • Rutgers University, Flatiron Institute
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Center for Materials Theory, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA
    • Rutgers University
  • Yicheng Tang

    • Rutgers University
  • Patrick Azaria

    • Sorbonne University
  • Natan Andrei

    • Rutgers University, New Brunswick