Parton theory of magnetic polarons: Mesonic resonances and signatures in dynamics
Fabian Grusdt, Marton Kanasz-Nagy, Annabelle Bohrdt, Christie S. Chiu,, Geoffrey Ji, Markus Greiner, Daniel Greif, Eugene Demler

TL;DR
This paper develops a parton-based theoretical framework for magnetic polarons in the t-Jz model, predicting mesonic resonances and signatures in dynamics, with relevance to ultracold atom experiments and high-Tc superconductivity.
Contribution
It introduces a microscopic parton theory for magnetic polarons, benchmarking it with numerical simulations, and predicts excited states and dynamical signatures observable in quantum gas microscope experiments.
Findings
Magnetic polarons as bound states of spinon and holon
Prediction of mesonic resonances as rotational excitations
Feasibility of observing partons in ultracold atom experiments
Abstract
When a mobile hole is moving in an anti-ferromagnet it distorts the surrounding Neel order and forms a magnetic polaron. Such interplay between hole motion and anti-ferromagnetism is believed to be at the heart of high-Tc superconductivity in cuprates. We study a single hole described by the t-Jz model with Ising interactions between the spins in 2D. This situation can be experimentally realized in quantum gas microscopes. When the hole hopping is much larger than couplings between the spins, we find strong evidence that magnetic polarons can be understood as bound states of two partons, a spinon and a holon carrying spin and charge quantum numbers respectively. We introduce a microscopic parton description which is benchmarked by comparison with results from advanced numerical simulations. Using this parton theory, we predict a series of excited states that are invisible in the…
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