The Bosonic RKKY Effect: Long-Range Order in a Spin-Boson Chain
ORAL
Abstract
Coupling of a two-level system to a dissipative bosonic bath is a well-studied problem known as the Caldeira-Leggett model. Here, we generalize this model to a 1D chain of Ising pseudospins coupled to a bosonic bath with Ohmic dissipation. Bath-induced interactions can produce a long-range ordered state even in the absence of direct interactions between the pseudospins. By analogy to the RKKY effect in metal-impurity systems, we refer to these induced interactions as the "Bosonic RKKY Effect". The long-range interactions depend on the form of the bath boson spectral function, which must be chosen based on the physical implementation. For a bath spectral function that decays exponentially above the cutoff frequency ωc, the bosonic RKKY interactions drive a quantum phase transition from a quantum paramagnet to a quantum Ising ferromagnet as the dissipation strength increases. By employing a quantum-to-classical mapping [1], we use classical Monte Carlo simulations to study the quantum phase diagram of the spin-boson chain. We find that the universality class of this quantum critical point is distinct from previously studied related models.
References:
[1] S. Sachdev, Quantum Phase Transitions (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1999).
References:
[1] S. Sachdev, Quantum Phase Transitions (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1999).
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Presenters
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Matthew Butcher
Rice University
Authors
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Matthew Butcher
Rice University
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Jed Pixley
Rutgers University, New Brunswick, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers University, Department of Physics, Rutgers, Rutgers University, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
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Andriy Nevidomskyy
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, Rice Univ, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, TX, USA, Rice Center for Quantum Materials, Rice University, Rice University, Department of Physics and Astronomy and Rice Center for Quantum Materials, Rice Univ, Physics and Astronomy, Rice University