Quantum Heisenberg model explained
The quantum Heisenberg model, developed by Werner Heisenberg, is a statistical mechanical model used in the study of critical points and phase transitions of magnetic systems, in which the spins of the magnetic systems are treated quantum mechanically. It is related to the prototypical Ising model, where at each site of a lattice, a spin
represents a microscopic magnetic dipole to which the magnetic moment is either up or down. Except the coupling between magnetic dipole moments, there is also a multipolar version of Heisenberg model called the
multipolar exchange interaction.
Overview
For quantum mechanical reasons (see exchange interaction or), the dominant coupling between two dipoles may cause nearest-neighbors to have lowest energy when they are aligned. Under this assumption (so that magnetic interactions only occur between adjacent dipoles) and on a 1-dimensional periodic lattice, the Hamiltonian can be written in the form
\hatH=-J
\sigmaj\sigmaj+1-h
\sigmaj
,
where
is the
coupling constant and dipoles are represented by classical vectors (or "spins") σ
j, subject to the periodic boundary condition
. The Heisenberg model is a more realistic model in that it treats the spins quantum-mechanically, by replacing the spin by a quantum operator acting upon the
tensor product
, of dimension
. To define it, recall the
Pauli spin-1/2 matrices\sigmax=\begin{pmatrix}
0&1\\
1&0
\end{pmatrix}
,
\sigmay=\begin{pmatrix}
0&-i\\
i&0
\end{pmatrix}
,
\sigmaz=\begin{pmatrix}
1&0\\
0&-1
\end{pmatrix}
,
and for
and
denote
, where
is the
identity matrix.Given a choice of real-valued coupling constants
and
, the Hamiltonian is given by
where the
on the right-hand side indicates the external
magnetic field, with periodic
boundary conditions. The objective is to determine the
spectrum of the Hamiltonian, from which the
partition function can be calculated and the
thermodynamics of the system can be studied.
It is common to name the model depending on the values of
,
and
: if
, the model is called the Heisenberg XYZ model; in the case of
, it is the Heisenberg XXZ model; if
, it is the Heisenberg XXX model. The spin 1/2 Heisenberg model in one dimension may be solved exactly using the
Bethe ansatz.
[1] In the algebraic formulation, these are related to particular
quantum affine algebras and elliptic quantum groups in the XXZ and XYZ cases respectively.
[2] Other approaches do so without Bethe ansatz.
[3] XXX model
The physics of the Heisenberg XXX model strongly depends on the sign of the coupling constant
and the dimension of the space. For positive
the ground state is always
ferromagnetic. At negative
the ground state is
antiferromagnetic in two and three dimensions.
[4] In one dimension the nature of correlations in the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model depends on the spin of the magnetic dipoles. If the spin is integer then only
short-range order is present. A system of half-integer spins exhibits quasi-long range order.
A simplified version of Heisenberg model is the one-dimensional Ising model, where the transverse magnetic field is in the x-direction, and the interaction is only in the z-direction:
.
At small g and large g, the ground state degeneracy is different, which implies that there must be a quantum phase transition in between. It can be solved exactly for the critical point using the duality analysis.[5] The duality transition of the Pauli matrices is and
, where
and
are also Pauli matrices which obey the Pauli matrix algebra.Under periodic boundary conditions, the transformed Hamiltonian can be shown is of a very similar form:
but for the
attached to the spin interaction term. Assuming that there's only one critical point, we can conclude that the phase transition happens at
.
Solution by Bethe ansatz
See main article: article and Bethe ansatz.
XXX1/2 model
Following the approach of, the spectrum of the Hamiltonian for the XXX modelcan be determined by the Bethe ansatz. In this context, for an appropriately defined family of operators
dependent on a spectral parameter
acting on the total Hilbert space
with each
, a
Bethe vector is a vector of the form
where
.If the
satisfy the
Bethe equationthen the Bethe vector is an eigenvector of
with eigenvalue
.
The family
as well as three other families come from a
transfer matrix
(in turn defined using a
Lax matrix), which acts on
along with an auxiliary space
, and can be written as a
block matrix with entries in
,
which satisfies fundamental
commutation relations (FCRs) similar in form to the
Yang–Baxter equation used to derive the Bethe equations. The FCRs also show there is a large commuting subalgebra given by the
generating function
, as
, so when
is written as a
polynomial in
, the coefficients all commute, spanning a commutative subalgebra which
is an element of. The Bethe vectors are in fact simultaneous eigenvectors for the whole subalgebra.
XXXs model
For higher spins, say spin
, replace
with
coming from the
Lie algebra representation of the
Lie algebra
, of dimension
. The XXX
s Hamiltonian
is solvable by Bethe ansatz with Bethe equations
XXZs model
For spin
and a parameter
for the deformation from the XXX model, the BAE (Bethe ansatz equation) is
Notably, for
these are precisely the BAEs for the
six-vertex model, after identifying
, where
is the
anisotropy parameter of the six-vertex model.
[6] [7] This was originally thought to be coincidental until Baxter showed the XXZ Hamiltonian was contained in the algebra generated by the transfer matrix
,
[8] given exactly by
Applications
- Another important object is entanglement entropy. One way to describe it is to subdivide the unique ground state into a block (several sequential spins) and the environment (the rest of the ground state). The entropy of the block can be considered as entanglement entropy. At zero temperature in the critical region (thermodynamic limit) it scales logarithmically with the size of the block. As the temperature increases the logarithmic dependence changes into a linear function.[9] For large temperatures linear dependence follows from the second law of thermodynamics.
- The Heisenberg model provides an important and tractable theoretical example for applying density matrix renormalisation.
- The six-vertex model can be solved using the algebraic Bethe ansatz for the Heisenberg spin chain .
- The half-filled Hubbard model in the limit of strong repulsive interactions can be mapped onto a Heisenberg model with
representing the strength of the
superexchange interaction.
- Limits of the model as the lattice spacing is sent to zero (and various limits are taken for variables appearing in the theory) describes integrable field theories, both non-relativistic such as the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, and relativistic, such as the
sigma model, the
sigma model (which is also a
principal chiral model) and the
sine-Gordon model.
limit of
N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory[10] Extended symmetry
, while in the XXZ case this is the
quantum group
, the
q-deformation of the
affine Lie algebra of
, as explained in the notes by .
These appear through the transfer matrix, and the condition that the Bethe vectors are generated from a state
satisfying
corresponds to the solutions being part of a highest-weight representation of the extended symmetry algebras.
See also
References
- R.J. Baxter, Exactly solved models in statistical mechanics, London, Academic Press, 1982
- Heisenberg . W. . Zur Theorie des Ferromagnetismus . On the theory of ferromagnetism . German . Zeitschrift für Physik . 1 September 1928 . 49 . 9 . 619–636 . 10.1007/BF01328601 . 1928ZPhy...49..619H . 122524239 .
- Bethe . H. . Zur Theorie der Metalle . On the theory of metals . German . Zeitschrift für Physik . 1 March 1931 . 71 . 3 . 205–226 . 10.1007/BF01341708 . 1931ZPhy...71..205B . 124225487 .
Notes and References
- Bonechi . F . Celeghini . E . Giachetti . R . Sorace . E . Tarlini . M . Heisenberg XXZ model and quantum Galilei group . Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General . 7 August 1992 . 25 . 15 . L939–L943 . 10.1088/0305-4470/25/15/007 . hep-th/9204054 . 1992JPhA...25L.939B . 119046025 .
- hep-th/9605187v1. L. D.. Faddeev. How Algebraic Bethe Ansatz works for integrable model. 26 May 1996.
- Rojas . Onofre . Souza . S.M. de . Corrêa Silva . E.V. . Thomaz . M.T. . Thermodynamics of the limiting cases of the XXZ model without Bethe ansatz . Brazilian Journal of Physics . December 2001 . 31 . 4 . 577–582 . 10.1590/s0103-97332001000400008 . 2001BrJPh..31..577R . free .
- Web site: The Heisenberg Model - a Bibliography. Tom Kennedy. Bruno Nachtergaele. 6 Jun 2019.
- Book: 10.1007/978-1-4020-3463-3_13 . Duality in low dimensional quantum field theories . Strong interactions in low dimensions . Physics and Chemistry of Materials with Low-Dimens . 2004 . Fisher . Matthew P. A. . 25 . 419–438 . 978-1-4020-1798-8 .
- Lieb . Elliott H. . Exact Solution of the Problem of the Entropy of Two-Dimensional Ice . Physical Review Letters . 24 April 1967 . 18 . 17 . 692–694 . 10.1103/PhysRevLett.18.692. 1967PhRvL..18..692L .
- Dorey . Patrick . Dunning . Clare . Tateo . Roberto . The ODE/IM correspondence . Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical . 10 August 2007 . 40 . 32 . R205–R283 . 10.1088/1751-8113/40/32/R01 . 14281617 . 1751-8113.
- Baxter . Rodney J . One-dimensional anisotropic Heisenberg chain . Annals of Physics . 1 April 1972 . 70 . 2 . 323–337 . 10.1016/0003-4916(72)90270-9 . 1972AnPhy..70..323B . en . 0003-4916.
- Korepin . V. E. . Universality of Entropy Scaling in One Dimensional Gapless Models . Physical Review Letters . 5 March 2004 . 92 . 9 . 096402 . 10.1103/PhysRevLett.92.096402 . 15089496 . cond-mat/0311056 . 2004PhRvL..92i6402K . 20620724 .
- Beisert . Niklas . Niklas Beisert . The dilatation operator of N=4 super Yang–Mills theory and integrability . Physics Reports . 1 December 2004 . 405 . 1 . 1–202 . 10.1016/j.physrep.2004.09.007. hep-th/0407277 . 2004PhR...405....1B . 118949332 .