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Finite-temperature critical behavior of long-range quantum Ising models

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Heyl,  Markus
Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Max Planck Society;

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2104.15070.pdf
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Citation

Lazo, E. G., Heyl, M., Dalmonte, M., & Angelone, A. (2021). Finite-temperature critical behavior of long-range quantum Ising models. SciPost Physics Core, 11(4): 076. doi:10.21468/SciPostPhys.11.4.076.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0009-98A9-D
Abstract
We study the phase diagram and critical properties of quantum Ising chains with longrange ferromagnetic interactions decaying in a power-law fashion with exponent alpha, in regimes of direct interest for current trapped ion experiments. Using large-scale path integral Monte Carlo simulations, we investigate both the ground-state and the nonzerotemperature regimes. We identify the phase boundary of the ferromagnetic phase and obtain accurate estimates for the ferromagnetic-paramagnetic transition temperatures. We further determine the critical exponents of the respective transitions. Our results are in agreement with existing predictions for interaction exponents alpha > 1 up to small deviations in some critical exponents. We also address the elusive regime alpha < 1, where we find that the universality class of both the ground-state and nonzero-temperature transition is consistent with the mean-field limit at alpha = 0. Our work not only contributes to the understanding of the equilibrium properties of long-range interacting quantum Ising models, but can also be important for addressing fundamental dynamical aspects, such as issues concerning the open question of thermalization in such models.