Strong-to-weak spontaneous breaking of 1-form symmetry and intrinsically mixed topological order

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

Topological orders in 2+1d are spontaneous symmetry-breaking (SSB) phases of 1-form symmetries in pure states. The notion of symmetry is further enriched in the context of mixed states, where a symmetry can be either ``strong" or ``weak". In this work, we apply a Rényi-2 version of the proposed equivalence relation in [Sang, Lessa, Mong, Grover, Wang, & Hsieh, to appear] on density matrices that is slightly finer than two-way channel connectivity. This equivalence relation distinguishes general 1-form strong-to-weak SSB (SW-SSB) states from phases containing pure states, and therefore labels SW-SSB states as ``intrinsically mixed". According to our equivalence relation, two states are equivalent if and only if they are connected to each other by finite Lindbladian evolution that maintains continuously varying, finite Rényi-2 Markov length. We then examine a natural setting for finding such density matrices: disordered ensembles. Specifically, we study the toric code with various types of disorders and show that in each case, the ensemble of ground states corresponding to different disorder realizations form a density matrix with different strong and weak SSB patterns of 1-form symmetries, including SW-SSB. Furthermore we show by perturbative calculations that these disordered ensembles form stable ``phases" in the sense that they exist over a finite parameter range, according to our equivalence relation.

*This research is partially supported by the Simons Collaboration on Ultra Quantum Matter which is a grant from the Simons Foundation (651440, Z.-X. L.), and grant NSF PHY-2309135 to the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP). YX acknowledges support from the NSF through OAC-2118310. JHZ is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under the Award Number DE-SC0024324. C.X. is supported by the Simons Foundation through the Simons Investigator program.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2409.17530

Presenters

  • Zhu-Xi Luo

    • Harvard University
    • Georgia Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Carolyn Zhang

    • Harvard University
  • Yichen Xu

    • Cornell University
  • Jianhao Zhang

    • University of Colorado Boulder
  • Cenke Xu

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Zhen Bi

    • Pennsylvania State University
  • Zhu-Xi Luo

    • Harvard University
    • Georgia Institute of Technology