Confinement in doped Z2 lattice gauge theories
ORAL
Abstract
In proof-of-principle experiments, ultracold atoms have demonstrated that Z2 lattice gauge theories with dynamical matter can be studied in quantum simulators, and realistic proposals for large-scale realizations exist. Motivated by these developments, here we study the deconfinement of U(1) charges in such models, with a strong focus on observables directly accessible from snapshots generated by quantum simulators. We demonstrate that in the τx-basis the confined phase is characterized by localized hole pairs connected by (short) strings while deconfinement implies a global net of strings spanning over the entire lattice: We probe deconfinement with Monte Carlo simulations using percolation-inspired order parameters.
Moreover, we simulate a Hamiltonian in two dimensions that is designed from scratch to be experimentally realistic in Rydberg atom array experiments. We show that for small doping, there is a thermal deconfinement phase transition. For large doping, charges are always confined in the thermodynamic limit. For a related three-dimensional model, a thermal deconfinement phase transition exists for arbitrary doping. We map out the phase diagram and calculate the critical exponents. We speculate whether the use of percolation-inspired order parameters can be extended to the Fradkin-Shenker model and related models.
Moreover, we simulate a Hamiltonian in two dimensions that is designed from scratch to be experimentally realistic in Rydberg atom array experiments. We show that for small doping, there is a thermal deconfinement phase transition. For large doping, charges are always confined in the thermodynamic limit. For a related three-dimensional model, a thermal deconfinement phase transition exists for arbitrary doping. We map out the phase diagram and calculate the critical exponents. We speculate whether the use of percolation-inspired order parameters can be extended to the Fradkin-Shenker model and related models.
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Publication: 1) https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.08541<br>2) In preparation
Presenters
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Simon M Linsel
LMU Munich
Authors
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Simon M Linsel
LMU Munich
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Lukas Homeier
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU-Munich)
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Annabelle Bohrdt
Harvard University and ITAMP
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Fabian Grusdt
LMU Munich, LMU München