154 research outputs found
Diagonalizing transfer matrices and matrix product operators: a medley of exact and computational methods
Transfer matrices and matrix product operators play an ubiquitous role in the
field of many body physics. This paper gives an ideosyncratic overview of
applications, exact results and computational aspects of diagonalizing transfer
matrices and matrix product operators. The results in this paper are a mixture
of classic results, presented from the point of view of tensor networks, and of
new results. Topics discussed are exact solutions of transfer matrices in
equilibrium and non-equilibrium statistical physics, tensor network states,
matrix product operator algebras, and numerical matrix product state methods
for finding extremal eigenvectors of matrix product operators.Comment: Lecture notes from a course at Vienna Universit
Simulating excitation spectra with projected entangled-pair states
We develop and benchmark a technique for simulating excitation spectra of
generic two-dimensional quantum lattice systems using the framework of
projected entangled-pair states (PEPS). The technique relies on a variational
ansatz for capturing quasiparticle excitations on top of a PEPS ground state.
Our method perfectly captures the quasiparticle dispersion relation of the
square-lattice transverse-field Ising model, and reproduces the spin-wave
velocity and the spin-wave anomaly in the square-lattice Heisenberg model with
high precision
Tangent-space methods for uniform matrix product states
In these lecture notes we give a technical overview of tangent-space methods for matrix product states in the thermodynamic limit. We introduce the manifold of uniform matrix product states, show how to compute different types of observables, and discuss the concept of a tangent space. We explain how to variationally optimize ground-state approximations, implement real-time evolution and describe elementary excitations for a given model Hamiltonian. Also, we explain how matrix product states approximate fixed points of one-dimensional transfer matrices. We show how all these methods can be translated to the language of continuous matrix product states for one-dimensional field theories. We conclude with some extensions of the tangent-space formalism and with an outlook to new applications
Post-Matrix Product State Methods: To tangent space and beyond
We develop in full detail the formalism of tangent states to the manifold of
matrix product states, and show how they naturally appear in studying
time-evolution, excitations and spectral functions. We focus on the case of
systems with translation invariance in the thermodynamic limit, where momentum
is a well defined quantum number. We present some new illustrative results and
discuss analogous constructions for other variational classes. We also discuss
generalizations and extensions beyond the tangent space, and give a general
outlook towards post matrix product methods.Comment: 40 pages, 8 figure
Matrix product states and variational methods applied to critical quantum field theory
We study the second-order quantum phase-transition of massive real scalar
field theory with a quartic interaction ( theory) in (1+1) dimensions
on an infinite spatial lattice using matrix product states (MPS). We introduce
and apply a naive variational conjugate gradient method, based on the
time-dependent variational principle (TDVP) for imaginary time, to obtain
approximate ground states, using a related ansatz for excitations to calculate
the particle and soliton masses and to obtain the spectral density. We also
estimate the central charge using finite-entanglement scaling. Our value for
the critical parameter agrees well with recent Monte Carlo results, improving
on an earlier study which used the related DMRG method, verifying that these
techniques are well-suited to studying critical field systems. We also obtain
critical exponents that agree, as expected, with those of the transverse Ising
model. Additionally, we treat the special case of uniform product states (mean
field theory) separately, showing that they may be used to investigate
non-critical quantum field theories under certain conditions.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figures, with a minor improvement to the QFT sectio
Scattering particles in quantum spin chains
A variational approach for constructing an effective particle description of
the low-energy physics of one-dimensional quantum spin chains is presented.
Based on the matrix product state formalism, we compute the one- and
two-particle excitations as eigenstates of the full microscopic Hamiltonian. We
interpret the excitations as particles on a strongly-correlated background with
non-trivial dispersion relations, spectral weights and two-particle S matrices.
Based on this information, we show how to describe a finite density of
excitations as an interacting gas of bosons, using its approximate
integrability at low densities. We apply our framework to the Heisenberg
antiferromagnetic ladder: we compute the elementary excitation spectrum and the
magnon-magnon S matrix, study the formation of bound states and determine both
static and dynamic properties of the magnetized ladder.Comment: published versio
Excitations and the tangent space of projected entangled-pair states
We develop tangent space methods for projected entangled-pair states (PEPS)
that provide direct access to the low-energy sector of strongly-correlated
two-dimensional quantum systems. More specifically, we construct a variational
ansatz for elementary excitations on top of PEPS ground states that allows for
computing gaps, dispersion relations, and spectral weights directly in the
thermodynamic limit. Solving the corresponding variational problem requires the
evaluation of momentum transformed two-point and three-point correlation
functions on a PEPS background, which we can compute efficiently by using a
contraction scheme. As an application we study the spectral properties of the
magnons of the Affleck-Kennedy-Lieb-Tasaki model on the square lattice and the
anyonic excitations in a perturbed version of Kitaev's toric code
Global anomaly detection in two-dimensional symmetry-protected topological phases
Edge theories of symmetry-protected topological phases are well-known to
possess global symmetry anomalies. In this work we focus on two-dimensional
bosonic phases protected by an on-site symmetry and analyse the corresponding
edge anomalies in more detail. Physical interpretations of the anomaly in terms
of an obstruction to orbifolding and constructing symmetry-preserving
boundaries are connected to the cohomology classification of symmetry-protected
phases in two dimensions. Using the tensor network and matrix product state
formalism we numerically illustrate our arguments and discuss computational
detection schemes to identify symmetry-protected order in a ground state wave
function
Faster identification of optimal contraction sequences for tensor networks
The efficient evaluation of tensor expressions involving sums over multiple
indices is of significant importance to many fields of research, including
quantum many-body physics, loop quantum gravity, and quantum chemistry. The
computational cost of evaluating an expression may depend strongly upon the
order in which the index sums are evaluated, and determination of the
operation-minimising contraction sequence for a single tensor network (single
term, in quantum chemistry) is known to be NP-hard. The current preferred
solution is an exhaustive search, using either an iterative depth-first
approach with pruning or dynamic programming and memoisation, but these
approaches are impractical for many of the larger tensor network Ansaetze
encountered in quantum many-body physics. We present a modified search
algorithm with enhanced pruning which exhibits a performance increase of
several orders of magnitude while still guaranteeing identification of an
optimal operation-minimising contraction sequence for a single tensor network.
A reference implementation for MATLAB, compatible with the ncon() and
multienv() network contractors of arXiv:1402.0939 and arXiv:1310.8023
respectively, is supplied.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figs, 2 tables, includes reference implementation of
algorithm, v2.01. Update corrects the display of contraction sequences
involving single-tensor traces (i.e. where an index in the input appears
twice on the same tensor
Continuous matrix product states with periodic boundary conditions and an application to atomtronics
We introduce a time evolution algorithm for one-dimensional quantum field theories with periodic boundary conditions. This is done by applying the Dirac-Frenkel time-dependent variational principle to the set of translational invariant continuous matrix product stateswith periodic boundary conditions. Moreover, the ansatz is accompanied with additional boundary degrees of freedom to study quantum impurity problems. The algorithm allows for a cutoff in the spectrum of the transfer matrix and thus has an efficient computational scaling. In particular we study the prototypical example of an atomtronic system-an interacting Bose gas rotating in a ring shaped trap in the presence of a localized barrier potential
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