Abstract

In recent years, new phases of matter that are beyond the Landau paradigm of symmetry breaking have been accumulating, and to catch up with this fast development, new notions of global symmetry are introduced. Among them, the higher-form symmetry, whose symmetry charges are spatially extended, can be used to describe topologically ordered phases as the spontaneous breaking of the symmetry, and consequently unify the unconventional and conventional phases under the same conceptual framework. However, such conceptual tools have not been put into quantitative tests except for certain solvable models, therefore limiting their usage in the more generic quantum many-body systems. In this work, we study ${\mathbb{Z}}_{2}$ higher-form symmetry in a quantum Ising model, which is dual to the global (zero-form) Ising symmetry. We compute the expectation value of the Ising disorder operator, which is a nonlocal order parameter for the higher-form symmetry, analytically in free scalar theories and through unbiased quantum Monte Carlo simulations for the interacting fixed point in $(2+1)d$. From the scaling form of this extended object, we confirm that the higher-form symmetry is indeed spontaneously broken inside the paramagnetic, or quantum disordered phase (in the Landau sense), but remains symmetric in the ferromagnetic or ordered phase. At the Ising critical point, we find that the disorder operator also obeys a ``perimeter'' law scaling with possibly multiplicative power-law corrections. We discuss examples where both the global zero-form symmetry and the dual higher-form symmetry are preserved, in systems with a codimension-1 manifold of gapless points in momentum space. These results provide nontrivial working examples of higher-form symmetry operators, including the direct computation of one-form order parameter in an interacting conformal field theory, and open the avenue for their generic implementation in quantum many-body systems.

Highlights

  • Global symmetries are instrumental in organizing our understanding of phases of matter

  • Through large-scale quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations, we find numerically that at the transition, the disorder operator defined on a rectangular region scales as lse−a1l, where l is the perimeter of the region, and s > 0 is a universal constant

  • The Rényi entropy can be calculated with a replica trick, which we review in the Hamiltonian formalism

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Global symmetries are instrumental in organizing our understanding of phases of matter. For a well-known example, confined and deconfined phases of a gauge theory are distinguished by the behavior of the expectation value of Wilson loop operators [9,10] To incorporate such extended observables into the symmetry framework, higher-form symmetries [11,12,13], and more generally algebraic symmetries [14,15], have been introduced. We conclude that the 1-form symmetry is spontaneously broken at the (2 + 1)d Ising transition, and it remains so in the disordered phase of the model. This is in stark contrast with the D = 1 case, where the disorder operator has a power-law decay.

GENERALIZED GLOBAL SYMMETRY
Scaling of disorder operator in field theory
ORDER AND DISORDER IN ISING SPIN MODELS
NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS
CONCLUSION AND DISCUSSION
SSE on σz basis The Hamiltonian for the transverse field Ising model is
SSE on σx basis
Curve fitting
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