Dimerization in quantum spin chains with \(O(n)\) symmetry
DOI10.1007/s00220-021-04148-1zbMath1489.82006arXiv2101.11464OpenAlexW3122608403MaRDI QIDQ2231668
Daniel Ueltschi, Bruno Nachtergaele, Peter Mühlbacher, Jakob E. Björnberg
Publication date: 30 September 2021
Published in: Communications in Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.11464
Phase transitions (general) in equilibrium statistical mechanics (82B26) Lattice systems (Ising, dimer, Potts, etc.) and systems on graphs arising in equilibrium statistical mechanics (82B20) Quantum dynamics and nonequilibrium statistical mechanics (general) (82C10) Critical phenomena in equilibrium statistical mechanics (82B27)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Universal Bethe ansatz solution for the Temperley-Lieb spin chain
- Existence of Néel order in the \(S=1\) bilinear-biquadratic Heisenberg model via random loops
- Lieb-Robinson bounds and the exponential clustering theorem
- Spectral gap and exponential decay of correlations
- Cluster expansion for abstract polymer models
- Hidden symmetry breaking and the Haldane phase in \(S=1\) quantum spin chains
- Geometric aspects of quantum spin states
- Universality for the random-cluster model on isoradial graphs
- Dimerization and Néel order in different quantum spin chains through a shared loop representation
- A short proof of the discontinuity of phase transition in the planar random-cluster model with \(q > 4\)
- Improved lower bound on thermodynamic pressure of the spin 1/2 Heisenberg ferromagnet
- A direct proof of dimerization in a family of \(\mathrm{SU}(n)\)-invariant quantum spin chains
- Long-range order in the ground state of theS= 1 isotropic bilinear-biquadratic exchange Hamiltonian
- Quasi-locality bounds for quantum lattice systems. I. Lieb-Robinson bounds, quasi-local maps, and spectral flow automorphisms
- Random loop representations for quantum spin systems
This page was built for publication: Dimerization in quantum spin chains with \(O(n)\) symmetry