Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching

Phase transitions and their associated critical phenomena are of fundamental importance and play a crucial role in the development of statistical physics for both classical and quantum systems. Phase transitions embody diverse aspects of physics and also have numerous applications outside physics, e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Liu, Cheng-Wei
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15436
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-15436
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-154362019-04-05T10:28:24Z Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching Liu, Cheng-Wei Physics QAQMC Non-equilibrium quench Quantum annealing Quantum Monte Carlo Regular graphs Spin-glass Phase transitions and their associated critical phenomena are of fundamental importance and play a crucial role in the development of statistical physics for both classical and quantum systems. Phase transitions embody diverse aspects of physics and also have numerous applications outside physics, e.g., in chemistry, biology, and combinatorial optimization problems in computer science. Many problems can be reduced to a system consisting of a large number of interacting agents, which under some circumstances (e.g., changes of external parameters) exhibit collective behavior; this type of scenario also underlies phase transitions. The theoretical understanding of equilibrium phase transitions was put on a solid footing with the establishment of the renormalization group. In contrast, non-equilibrium phase transition are relatively less understood and currently a very active research topic. One important milestone here is the Kibble-Zurek (KZ) mechanism, which provides a useful framework for describing a system with a transition point approached through a non-equilibrium quench process. I developed two efficient Monte Carlo techniques for studying phase transitions, one is for classical phase transition and the other is for quantum phase transitions, both are under the framework of KZ scaling. For classical phase transition, I develop a non-equilibrium quench (NEQ) simulation that can completely avoid the critical slowing down problem. For quantum phase transitions, I develop a new algorithm, named quasi-adiabatic quantum Monte Carlo (QAQMC) algorithm for studying quantum quenches. I demonstrate the utility of QAQMC quantum Ising model and obtain high-precision results at the transition point, in particular showing generalized dynamic scaling in the quantum system. To further extend the methods, I study more complex systems such as spin-glasses and random graphs. The techniques allow us to investigate the problems efficiently. From the classical perspective, using the NEQ approach I verify the universality class of the 3D Ising spin-glasses. I also investigate the random 3-regular graphs in terms of both classical and quantum phase transitions. I demonstrate that under this simulation scheme, one can extract information associated with the classical and quantum spin-glass transitions without any knowledge prior to the simulation. 2016-04-06T16:00:41Z 2016-04-06T16:00:41Z 2015 2016-03-12T07:13:16Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15436 en_US Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Physics
QAQMC
Non-equilibrium quench
Quantum annealing
Quantum Monte Carlo
Regular graphs
Spin-glass
spellingShingle Physics
QAQMC
Non-equilibrium quench
Quantum annealing
Quantum Monte Carlo
Regular graphs
Spin-glass
Liu, Cheng-Wei
Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
description Phase transitions and their associated critical phenomena are of fundamental importance and play a crucial role in the development of statistical physics for both classical and quantum systems. Phase transitions embody diverse aspects of physics and also have numerous applications outside physics, e.g., in chemistry, biology, and combinatorial optimization problems in computer science. Many problems can be reduced to a system consisting of a large number of interacting agents, which under some circumstances (e.g., changes of external parameters) exhibit collective behavior; this type of scenario also underlies phase transitions. The theoretical understanding of equilibrium phase transitions was put on a solid footing with the establishment of the renormalization group. In contrast, non-equilibrium phase transition are relatively less understood and currently a very active research topic. One important milestone here is the Kibble-Zurek (KZ) mechanism, which provides a useful framework for describing a system with a transition point approached through a non-equilibrium quench process. I developed two efficient Monte Carlo techniques for studying phase transitions, one is for classical phase transition and the other is for quantum phase transitions, both are under the framework of KZ scaling. For classical phase transition, I develop a non-equilibrium quench (NEQ) simulation that can completely avoid the critical slowing down problem. For quantum phase transitions, I develop a new algorithm, named quasi-adiabatic quantum Monte Carlo (QAQMC) algorithm for studying quantum quenches. I demonstrate the utility of QAQMC quantum Ising model and obtain high-precision results at the transition point, in particular showing generalized dynamic scaling in the quantum system. To further extend the methods, I study more complex systems such as spin-glasses and random graphs. The techniques allow us to investigate the problems efficiently. From the classical perspective, using the NEQ approach I verify the universality class of the 3D Ising spin-glasses. I also investigate the random 3-regular graphs in terms of both classical and quantum phase transitions. I demonstrate that under this simulation scheme, one can extract information associated with the classical and quantum spin-glass transitions without any knowledge prior to the simulation.
author Liu, Cheng-Wei
author_facet Liu, Cheng-Wei
author_sort Liu, Cheng-Wei
title Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
title_short Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
title_full Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
title_fullStr Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
title_full_unstemmed Computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
title_sort computational studies of thermal and quantum phase transitions approached through non-equilibrium quenching
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15436
work_keys_str_mv AT liuchengwei computationalstudiesofthermalandquantumphasetransitionsapproachedthroughnonequilibriumquenching
_version_ 1719016373445722112