Tensor network states for the description of quantum many-body systems
Thorsten B. Wahl

TL;DR
This thesis explores tensor network states, specifically MPS and PEPS, to identify non-local order and describe chiral topological phases, providing criteria, explicit constructions, and numerical evidence for their physical relevance.
Contribution
It introduces a criterion for non-local order in MPS and constructs PEPS models for chiral topological states, advancing understanding of topological phases in tensor networks.
Findings
Criteria for long-range localizable entanglement in MPS.
Explicit PEPS constructions for chiral topological states.
Numerical evidence of PEPS approximating Chern insulators.
Abstract
This thesis is divided into two mainly independent parts: In the first part, we derive a criterion to determine when a translationally invariant Matrix Product State (MPS) has long range localizable entanglement, which indicates that the corresponding state has some kind of non-local hidden order. We give examples fulfilling this criterion and eventually use it to obtain all such MPS with bond dimension 2 and 3. In the second part, we show that Projected Entangled Pair States (PEPS) in two spatial dimensions can describe chiral topological states by explicitly constructing a family of such states with a non-trivial Chern number. We demonstrate that such free fermionic PEPS must necessarily be non-injective and have gapless parent Hamiltonians. Moreover, we provide numerical evidence that they can nevertheless approximate well the physical properties of Chern insulators with local…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Topological Materials and Phenomena
