Fracton excitations in classical frustrated kagome spin models
Max Hering, Han Yan, Johannes Reuther

TL;DR
This paper explores fracton excitations in classical frustrated kagome spin models with various spin types, revealing unique mobility constraints, glassy phases, and slow dynamics, expanding understanding of fracton phenomena in simpler systems.
Contribution
It demonstrates fracton-like behavior in classical kagome spin models with only two-body interactions, introducing new insights into their mobility and phase behavior.
Findings
Fracton-like excitations observed in Potts, XY, and Heisenberg kagome models.
Identification of a low-temperature glassy phase with metastable fracton states.
Absence of a Kosterlitz-Thouless transition in XY spins due to restricted defect mobility.
Abstract
Fractons are topological quasiparticles with limited mobility. While there exists a variety of models hosting these excitations, typical fracton systems require rather complicated many-particle interactions. Here, we discuss fracton behavior in the more common physical setting of classical kagome spin models with frustrated two-body interactions only. We investigate systems with different types of elementary spin degrees of freedom (three-state Potts, XY, and Heisenberg spins) which all exhibit characteristic subsystem symmetries and fracton-like excitations. The mobility constraints of isolated fractons and bound fracton pairs in the three-state Potts model are, however, strikingly different compared to the known type-I or type-II fracton models. One may still explain these properties in terms of type-I fracton behavior and construct an effective low-energy tensor gauge theory when…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
