Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories

We study the connection between the phase behaviour of quantum dimers and the dynamics of classical stochastic dimers. At the so-called Rokhsar–Kivelson (RK) point a quantum dimer Hamiltonian is equivalent to the Markov generator of the dynamics of classical dimers. A less well understood fact is th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oakes, Tom, Powell, Stephen, Castelnovo, Claudio, Lamacraft, Austen, Garrahan, Juan P.
Format: Article
Published: American Physical Society 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53130/
_version_ 1848798884910858240
author Oakes, Tom
Powell, Stephen
Castelnovo, Claudio
Lamacraft, Austen
Garrahan, Juan P.
author_facet Oakes, Tom
Powell, Stephen
Castelnovo, Claudio
Lamacraft, Austen
Garrahan, Juan P.
author_sort Oakes, Tom
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description We study the connection between the phase behaviour of quantum dimers and the dynamics of classical stochastic dimers. At the so-called Rokhsar–Kivelson (RK) point a quantum dimer Hamiltonian is equivalent to the Markov generator of the dynamics of classical dimers. A less well understood fact is that away from the RK point the quantum–classical connection persists: in this case the Hamiltonian corresponds to a non-stochastic “tilted” operator that encodes the statistics of time-integrated observables of the classical stochastic problem. This implies a direct relation between the phase behaviour of quantum dimers and properties of ensembles of stochastic trajectories of classical dimers. We make these ideas concrete by studying fully packed dimers on the square lattice. Using transition path sampling – supplemented by trajectory umbrella sampling – we obtain the large deviation statistics of dynamical activity in the classical problem, and show the correspondence between the phase behaviour of the classical and quantum systems. The transition at the RK point between quantum phases of distinct order corresponds, in the classical case, to a trajectory phase transition between active and inactive dynamical phases. Furthermore, from the structure of stochastic trajectories in the active dynamical phase we infer that the ground state of quantum dimers has columnar order to one side of the RK point. We discuss how these results relate to those from quantum Monte Carlo, and how our approach may generalise to other problems.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:26:52Z
format Article
id nottingham-53130
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:26:52Z
publishDate 2018
publisher American Physical Society
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-531302020-05-04T19:46:39Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53130/ Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories Oakes, Tom Powell, Stephen Castelnovo, Claudio Lamacraft, Austen Garrahan, Juan P. We study the connection between the phase behaviour of quantum dimers and the dynamics of classical stochastic dimers. At the so-called Rokhsar–Kivelson (RK) point a quantum dimer Hamiltonian is equivalent to the Markov generator of the dynamics of classical dimers. A less well understood fact is that away from the RK point the quantum–classical connection persists: in this case the Hamiltonian corresponds to a non-stochastic “tilted” operator that encodes the statistics of time-integrated observables of the classical stochastic problem. This implies a direct relation between the phase behaviour of quantum dimers and properties of ensembles of stochastic trajectories of classical dimers. We make these ideas concrete by studying fully packed dimers on the square lattice. Using transition path sampling – supplemented by trajectory umbrella sampling – we obtain the large deviation statistics of dynamical activity in the classical problem, and show the correspondence between the phase behaviour of the classical and quantum systems. The transition at the RK point between quantum phases of distinct order corresponds, in the classical case, to a trajectory phase transition between active and inactive dynamical phases. Furthermore, from the structure of stochastic trajectories in the active dynamical phase we infer that the ground state of quantum dimers has columnar order to one side of the RK point. We discuss how these results relate to those from quantum Monte Carlo, and how our approach may generalise to other problems. American Physical Society 2018-08-08 Article PeerReviewed Oakes, Tom, Powell, Stephen, Castelnovo, Claudio, Lamacraft, Austen and Garrahan, Juan P. (2018) Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories. Physical Review B, 98 (6). 064302. ISSN 2469-9969 https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.98.064302 doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.98.064302 doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.98.064302
spellingShingle Oakes, Tom
Powell, Stephen
Castelnovo, Claudio
Lamacraft, Austen
Garrahan, Juan P.
Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title_full Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title_fullStr Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title_full_unstemmed Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title_short Phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
title_sort phases of quantum dimers from ensembles of classical stochastic trajectories
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53130/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53130/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53130/