A quantum phase transition induced by a microscopic boundary condition
Jun Jing, Mike Guidry, Lian-Ao Wu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum phase transition in a one-dimensional spin model triggered by a microscopic boundary condition change, revealing new insights into boundary effects on quantum critical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel boundary-condition-induced quantum phase transition in a spin model, connecting microscopic boundary effects to quantum criticality.
Findings
Critical phenomena observed near the transition point.
Sudden change in ground-state properties.
Avoided level-crossing between ground and first excited states.
Abstract
Quantum phase transitions are sudden changes in the ground-state wavefunction of a many-body system that can occur as a control parameter such as a concentration or a field strength is varied. They are driven purely by the competition between quantum fluctuations and mutual interactions among constituents of the system, not by thermal fluctuations; hence they can occur even at zero temperature. Examples of quantum phase transitions in many-body physics may be found in systems ranging from high-temperature superconductors to topological insulators. A quantum phase transition usually can be characterized by nonanalyticity/discontinuity in certain order parameters or divergence of the ground state energy eigenvalue and/or its derivatives with respect to certain physical quantities. Here in a circular one-dimensional spin model with Heisenberg XY interaction and no magnetic field, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
