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Equilibration of Topological Defects at the Deconfined Quantum Critical Point
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- Deconfined quantum criticality (DQC) arises from fractionalization of quasi-particles and leads to fascinating behaviors beyond the Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson (LGW) description of phase transitions. The unusual aspects of DQC in equilibrium also suggest exotic phenomena out of equilibrium, which are still largely unexplored. Here we study manifestations of DQC when driving (quantum annealing) a two-dimensional quantum magnet through a critical point separating antiferromagnetic and spontaneously dimerized ground states. Numerical simulations show that the celebrated Kibble-Zurek scaling (KZS) mechanism is inadequate for describing the annealing process. To explain our results, we introduce the concept of dual asymmetric KZS, where a deconfinement time enters in addition to the conventional relaxation time and the scaling also depends on the direction in which the system is driven through the critical point according to a duality principle connecting the topological defects in the two phases. These defects -- spinons in the dimerized phase and space-time hedgehogs in the antiferromagnetic phase -- require a much longer time scale for equilibration than the amplitude of the order parameter. Beyond the new insights into DQC, our scaling approach provides a new window into out-of-equilibrium criticality with multiple length and time scales.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.2305.04771
- Document Type :
- Working Paper