Emergent Spacetime in Quantum Lattice Models
Matthew D. Horner

TL;DR
This paper explores how various quantum lattice models can exhibit emergent relativistic spacetimes, including curved geometries and black hole analogs, enabling laboratory simulation of relativistic and gravitational phenomena.
Contribution
It demonstrates methods to generate and observe emergent curved spacetimes and gravitational effects in quantum lattice models, extending the understanding of relativistic emergent phenomena in condensed matter systems.
Findings
Generation of emergent curved spacetimes in lattice models
Observation of relativistic effects via lattice observables
Simulation of Hawking radiation in a modified XY model
Abstract
Many quantum lattice models have an emergent relativistic description in their continuum limit. The celebrated example is graphene, whose continuum limit is described by the Dirac equation on a Minkowski spacetime. Not only does the continuum limit provide us with a dictionary of geometric observables to describe the models with, but it also allows one to solve models that were otherwise analytically intractable. In this thesis, we investigate novel features of this relativistic description for a range of quantum lattice models. In particular, we demonstrate how to generate emergent curved spacetimes and identify observables at the lattice level which reveal this emergent behaviour, allowing one to simulate relativistic effects in the laboratory. We first study carbon nanotubes, a system with an edge, which allows us to test the interesting feature of the Dirac equation that it allows…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
