Classical origins of Landau-incompatible transitions
Abhishodh Prakash, Nick G. Jones

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that classical statistical models with anomaly-free symmetries can exhibit Landau-incompatible continuous phase transitions, revealing classical analogs of deconfined quantum criticality.
Contribution
It shows that Landau-incompatible transitions are possible in classical models with anomaly-free symmetries, extending the understanding of phase transitions beyond quantum systems.
Findings
Classical models with integer Q exhibit Landau-incompatible phases and transitions.
Even Q models show direct transitions between incompatible symmetry-breaking phases.
Odd Q models display split phases separated by an 'unnecessary critical' line.
Abstract
Continuous phase transitions where symmetry is spontaneously broken are ubiquitous in physics and often found between `Landau-compatible' phases where residual symmetries of one phase are a subset of the other. However, continuous `deconfined quantum critical' transitions between Landau-incompatible symmetry-breaking phases are known to exist in certain quantum systems, often with anomalous microscopic symmetries. In this Letter, we investigate the need for such special conditions. We show that Landau-incompatible transitions can be found in a family of well-known classical statistical mechanical models with anomaly-free symmetries, introduced by Jos\'{e}, Kadanoff, Kirkpatrick and Nelson (Phys. Rev. B 16, 1217). The models are anisotropic deformations of the classical 2d XY model labelled by a positive integer . For a range of temperatures, even models exhibit two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures
