SOLITON SECTOR OF THE XY MODEL

1996 ◽  
Vol 10 (13n14) ◽  
pp. 1685-1693
Author(s):  
HUZIHIRO ARAKI

We study soliton sectors of the XY model by using known results and methods about its ground states. In the regions of parameters for which ground states are not unique, we show that (1) there are two soliton sectors depending on parameters of the model analytically in a well-defined sense, (2) the only sectors with “finite energy” are ground state and soliton sectors, and (3) the sudden appearance of additional ground states at a pair of specific values of parameters (despite analytic dependence of other ground states on parameters at those specific values), which were found in earlier study of ground states, can be understood as the degeneracy of one particle energy in the soliton sector (which has a continuous spectrum at other values of parameters) to a single point spectrum with infinite multiplicity at the specific values of parameters.

2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (03) ◽  
pp. 271-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
FUMIO HIROSHIMA

One electron system minimally coupled to a quantized radiation field is considered. It is assumed that the quantized radiation field is massless, and no infrared cutoff is imposed. The Hamiltonian, H, of this system is defined as a self-adjoint operator acting on L2 (ℝ3) ⊗ ℱ ≅ L2 (ℝ3; ℱ), where ℱ is the Boson Fock space over L2 (ℝ3 × {1, 2}). It is shown that the ground state, ψg, of H belongs to [Formula: see text], where N denotes the number operator of ℱ. Moreover, it is shown that for almost every electron position variable x ∈ ℝ3 and for arbitrary k ≥ 0, ‖(1 ⊗ Nk/2) ψg (x)‖ℱ ≤ Dk e-δ|x|m+1 with some constants m ≥ 0, Dk > 0, and δ > 0 independent of k. In particular [Formula: see text] for 0 < β < δ/2 is obtained.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (5&6) ◽  
pp. 393-429
Author(s):  
Matthew Hastings

We consider the entanglement properties of ground states of Hamiltonians which are sums of commuting projectors (we call these commuting projector Hamiltonians), in particular whether or not they have ``trivial" ground states, where a state is trivial if it is constructed by a local quantum circuit of bounded depth and range acting on a product state. It is known that Hamiltonians such as the toric code only have nontrivial ground states in two dimensions. Conversely, commuting projector Hamiltonians which are sums of two-body interactions have trivial ground states\cite{bv}. Using a coarse-graining procedure, this implies that any such Hamiltonian with bounded range interactions in one dimension has a trivial ground state. In this paper, we further explore the question of which Hamiltonians have trivial ground states. We define an ``interaction complex" for a Hamiltonian, which generalizes the notion of interaction graph and we show that if the interaction complex can be continuously mapped to a $1$-complex using a map with bounded diameter of pre-images then the Hamiltonian has a trivial ground state assuming one technical condition on the Hamiltonians holds (this condition holds for all stabilizer Hamiltonians, and we additionally prove the result for all Hamiltonians under one assumption on the $1$-complex). While this includes the cases considered by Ref.~\onlinecite{bv}, we show that it also includes a larger class of Hamiltonians whose interaction complexes cannot be coarse-grained into the case of Ref.~\onlinecite{bv} but still can be mapped continuously to a $1$-complex. One motivation for this study is an approach to the quantum PCP conjecture. We note that many commonly studied interaction complexes can be mapped to a $1$-complex after removing a small fraction of sites. For commuting projector Hamiltonians on such complexes, in order to find low energy trivial states for the original Hamiltonian, it would suffice to find trivial ground states for the Hamiltonian with those sites removed. Such trivial states can act as a classical witness to the existence of a low energy state. While this result applies for commuting Hamiltonians and does not necessarily apply to other Hamiltonians, it suggests that to prove a quantum PCP conjecture for commuting Hamiltonians, it is worth investigating interaction complexes which cannot be mapped to $1$-complexes after removing a small fraction of points. We define this more precisely below; in some sense this generalizes the notion of an expander graph. Surprisingly, such complexes do exist as will be shown elsewhere\cite{fh}, and have useful properties in quantum coding theory.


Author(s):  
Bartosz Bieganowski ◽  
Simone Secchi

Abstract We consider the nonlinear fractional problem $$\begin{aligned} (-\Delta )^{s} u + V(x) u = f(x,u)&\quad \hbox {in } \mathbb {R}^N \end{aligned}$$ ( - Δ ) s u + V ( x ) u = f ( x , u ) in R N We show that ground state solutions converge (along a subsequence) in $$L^2_{\mathrm {loc}} (\mathbb {R}^N)$$ L loc 2 ( R N ) , under suitable conditions on f and V, to a ground state solution of the local problem as $$s \rightarrow 1^-$$ s → 1 - .


1992 ◽  
Vol 06 (13) ◽  
pp. 793-801 ◽  
Author(s):  
PAVOL FARKAŠOVSKÝ

We have studied the ground state properties of the Falicov-Kimball model with unconstrained hopping. It is shown that the model still behaves non-trivially, although it no longer depends on the actual lattice structure and dimensionality of the system. For arbitrary ion configurations with total number of ions Ni, we have been able to determine domains in the plane of the chemical potentials of electrons and ions where these ion configurations are ground states. The phase diagram of the model is discussed.


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