Unconventional entanglement scaling and quantum criticality in the long-range spin-one Heisenberg chain with single-ion anisotropy
Patrick Adelhardt, Sean R. Muleady, Kai P. Schmidt, Alexey V. Gorshkov

TL;DR
This study explores how long-range interactions affect quantum criticality and phase transitions in a spin-one Heisenberg chain with single-ion anisotropy, revealing unconventional entanglement scaling and critical behavior.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the phase diagram and critical properties of this model, highlighting unconventional critical exponents influenced by long-range interactions.
Findings
Long-range interactions stabilize continuous symmetry breaking in the model.
Entanglement entropy shows logarithmic corrections beyond universal contributions.
Critical boundaries exhibit continuously varying exponents depending on the decay exponent.
Abstract
Long-range interactions can fundamentally reshape the low-energy properties of low-dimensional quantum matter, altering both continuous symmetry breaking and topological phenomena. However, their impact on the quantum criticality separating these regimes remains poorly understood. We determine the ground-state phase diagram and critical properties of the spin-one Heisenberg chain with single-ion anisotropy and staggered antiferromagnetic power-law interactions, using matrix-product state (MPS) calculations complemented by high-order series expansions (pCUT+MC). Such long-range, non-frustrated interactions circumvent the Hohenberg-Mermin-Wagner theorem, thereby stabilizing continuous symmetry breaking (CSB) phases in direct competition with the Haldane phase. We map out the resulting phase diagram and analyze the entanglement entropy scaling behavior in the U(1) and SU(2) CSB phases,…
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