Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session S07: Metal/Insulator and Superconductor/Insulator
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 7, 2019
BCEC
Room: 109B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Nandini Trivedi, Ohio State University
Abstract: S07.00011 : Amplitude (Higgs) mode at the superfluid-Mott glass transition*
1:15 PM–1:27 PM
Presenter:
Jack Crewse
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
Authors:
Jack Crewse
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
Thomas Vojta
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
We investigate the amplitude (Higgs) mode of a diluted quantum rotor model in two and three space dimensions close to their respective superfluid-Mott glass quantum phase transitions [1,2]. After mapping the Hamiltonians onto appropriate classical XY models, the systems are simulated by means of large-scale Monte Carlo simulations. The scalar susceptibility of clean, undiluted systems exhibit sharp spectral peaks associated with the amplitude mode that show the expected scaling behavior close to the critical point. However, the diluted systems do not exhibit such sharp peaks. Instead, the scalar susceptibility is dominated by broad, non-critical peaks which obscure any potential amplitude mode. To understand the fate of the amplitude mode in diluted systems we study the localization behavior of the mode by calculating dispersion relations near the critical point, for varying dilution strengths. We also calculate conductivity as an indirect measure of the amplitude modes existence in diluted systems.
[1] Vojta, et. al., Phys. Rev. B, 94,134501 (2016)
[2] Crewse, et al., Phys. Rev. B, 98, 054514 (2018)
*This work was supported in part by the NSF under grants No. DMR-1506152 and DMR-1828489.
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