Research Seminars @ Illinois

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Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

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The Anthony J Leggett Institute for Condensed Matter Physics Seminar: Spontaneous Breaking of Continuous Symmetry in One Dimension

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Physics Department
Location
ESB 190
Virtual
wifi event
Date
Aug 26, 2024   12:00 pm  
Speaker
Jong Yeon Lee, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Contact
Ljubica Milutinovic
E-Mail
ljubicam@illinois.edu
Phone
217-300-6393
Views
75
Originating Calendar
Physics - The Anthony J Leggett Institute for Condensed Matter Theory Seminar

In this talk, I will explore the intriguing intersection of spontaneous symmetry breaking and open quantum dynamics.

First, I will introduce a family of Hamiltonians that circumvents the Hohenberg-Mermin-Wagner theorem, which prohibits the spontaneous breaking of continuous symmetries in spatial dimensions d>1 at finite temperatures. The classical/quantum correspondence suggests the absence of continuous symmetry breaking in one dimension at zero temperature. While the Heisenberg ferromagnet and Hamiltonians with coordinate-dependent symmetry charges are known exceptions, our Hamiltonian uniquely exhibits spontaneous breaking of U(1) “on-site” symmetry at zero temperature, despite the order parameter not commuting with the Hamiltonian.

 In the second part, I will discuss the dynamics governed by a Brownian random circuit with strong U(1) symmetry. Interestingly, the emergent hydrodynamics of charge transport can be effectively described using the Hamiltonian from the first part. Moreover, the soft Goldstone modes associated with the spontaneous breaking of U(1) symmetry lead to diffusive or sub-diffusive charge dynamics. By constructing dispersive excited states of this effective Hamiltonian through a single-mode approximation, we gain a comprehensive understanding of many-body systems with conserved multipole moments and varying interaction ranges. Our approach further identifies exotic Krylov-space-resolved diffusive relaxation, verified numerically, even in the presence of dipole conservation.

 

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