Doped resonating valence bond states: a quantum information study
Seminar author:Sudipto Singha Roy
Event date and time:06/12/2017 02:30:pm
Event location:GiQ's seminar room
Event contact:
Abstract:
Resonating valence bond states have played a crucial role in the description of exotic
phases in strongly correlated systems, especially in the realm of Mott insulators and the
associated highTc superconducting phase transition. In particular, RVB states are
considered to be an important system to study the ground state properties of the doped
quantum spin1/2 ladder. It is therefore interesting to understand how quantum correlations
are distributed among the constituents of these composite systems. In this regard, we
formulate an analytical recursive method to generate the wave function of doped shortrange
resonating valence bond (RVB) states as a tool to efficiently estimate multisite entanglement
as well as other physical quantities in doped quantum spin ladders. Importantly, our results
show that within a specific doping concentration and model parameter regimes, the doped
RVB state essentially characterizes the trends of genuine multiparty entanglement in the
exact ground states of a Hubbard model with large onsite interactions. Moreover, we
consider an isotropic RVB network of spin1/2 particles with a finite fraction of defects, where
the corresponding wave function of the network is rotationally invariant under the action of
local unitaries. By using quantum informationtheoretic concepts like strong subadditivity of
von Neumann entropy and approximate quantum telecloning, we prove analytically that in
the presence of defects, caused by loss of a finite fraction of spins, the RVB network
sustains genuine multisite entanglement, and at the same time may exhibit finite
moderaterange bipartite entanglement, in contrast to the case with no defects.