Abstract:
Crystals of repulsively interacting cold ions in planar traps form hexagonal lattices, which undergo
a buckling instability towards a multi-layer structure as the transverse trap frequency is
reduced. The buckled structure is composed of three planes, whose separation increases continuously
from zero. In the work I will present [1], we study the effects of thermal and quantum fluctuations
by mapping this structural instability to the six-state clock model. A prominent implication of
this mapping is that at finite temperature T, fluctuations split the buckling instability into two
thermal transitions, accompanied by the appearance of an intermediate critical phase. This
phase is characterized by quasi-long-range order in the spatial tripartite pattern. It is manifested
by broadened Bragg peaks at new wave vectors, whose line-shape provides a direct
measurement of the temperature dependent exponentcharacteristic of the power-law
correlations in the critical phase. A quantum phase transition is found at the largest value of
the critical transverse frequency, where the critical intermediate phase shrinks to zero. Moreover,
within the ordered phase, we predict a crossover from classical to quantum behavior,
signifying the emergence of an additional characteristic scale for clock order. We discuss the experimental
realization, and propose that within accessible technology, such experiments can provide a direct probe of the rich phase diagram of the quantum clock model, not easily observable in condensed matter analogues. This highlights
the potential for ionic crystals to serve as simulators of complex models in
statistical mechanics and quantum field theory.
[1] Daniel Podolsky, Efrat Shimshoni, Giovanna Morigi and Shmuel Fishman, Phys. Rev. X
6, 031025 (2016).