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The Entropy of Six-Vertex Model with Variety of Different Boundary - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

The Entropy of Six-Vertex Model with Variety of Different Boundary Conditions Thiago Silva Tavares collaboration with G.A.P. Ribeiro and V.E. Korepin State University of S ao Carlos, Brazil 11/06/2015 Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015


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The Entropy of Six-Vertex Model with Variety of Different Boundary Conditions

Thiago Silva Tavares collaboration with G.A.P. Ribeiro and V.E. Korepin

State University of S˜ ao Carlos, Brazil

11/06/2015

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 1 / 37

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Outline

1

First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Introduction Free-Boundary decomposition Homogeneous Toroidal Boundaries Mixed Toroidal Boundaries: First Row

2

Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants N´ eel Boundary Condition Merge type Boundaries

Domain-Wall - Ferroelectric Fusion N´ eel - Ferroelectric Fusion

3

Final Remarks and Open Questions

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 2 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Introduction

A non-trivial problem in combinatorics

Six-vertex model was proposed as a 2D realization of the counting problem of ice residual entropy Solved by Lieb under periodic (toroidal) boundary condition: S = 3

2 ln

4

3

  • .

Why Periodic Boundary Conditions? Should we always expect intensive properties to be independent of boundary conditions? The first Counter-examples! Are they exceptions to the rule?

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 3 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Introduction

A non-trivial problem in combinatorics

Six-vertex model was proposed as a 2D realization of the counting problem of ice residual entropy Solved by Lieb under periodic (toroidal) boundary condition: S = 3

2 ln

4

3

  • .

Why Periodic Boundary Conditions? Should we always expect intensive properties to be independent of boundary conditions? The first Counter-examples! Are they exceptions to the rule?

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 3 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Introduction

Brascamp et al prove that, for rectangular lattices with even number

  • f sites, the free-energy of free boundary conditions and periodic

boundary conditions are the same(1973). Batchelor et al prove that toroidal boundary conditions with antiperiodic closing on the horizontal and periodic closing on the vertical still gives the same free-energy as PBC(1995). Nevertheless, the number of lines must be even otherwise partition function is zero. Korepin and Zinn-Justin prove that Domain-Wall boundary conditions gives a different free-energy. The residual entropy is S = 1

2 ln( 33 24 ).

What is really happening? Are those kinds of boundary really exceptions?

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 4 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Free-Boundary decomposition Arrows can be either equal or opposite at closing! Horizontal: 0 ⇒ T (0) = A + D, 1 ⇒ T (1) = B + C Vertical: 0 ⇒ G(0) = Id, 1 ⇒ G(1) = σx Zfree =

  • φk ,θj =0,1

TrV  

L

  • k=1

G(φk )

Vk N

  • j=1

T (θj )(λj )   = TrV  

L

  • k=1
  • 1

1 1 1

  • k

(A(λ) + D(λ) + B(λ) + C(λ))N  , (1)

Θ10 Θ20 Φ10Φ20 Θ10 Θ20 Φ10Φ21 Θ10 Θ20 Φ11Φ20 Θ10 Θ20 Φ11Φ21 Θ10 Θ21 Φ10Φ20 Θ10 Θ21 Φ10Φ21 Θ10 Θ21 Φ11Φ20 Θ10 Θ21 Φ11Φ21 Θ11 Θ20 Φ10Φ20 Θ11 Θ20 Φ10Φ21 Θ11 Θ20 Φ11Φ20 Θ11 Θ20 Φ11Φ21 Θ11 Θ21 Φ10Φ20 Θ11 Θ21 Φ10Φ21 Θ11 Θ21 Φ11Φ20 Θ11 Θ21 Φ11Φ21

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 5 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Free-Boundary decomposition

Each component of the previous sum can be viewed as a particular toroidal boundary condition, which mix periodic and anti-periodic closings. One may organize these contributions in a matrix MN,L whose elements are the partitions Zj,k such j − 1 = θ120 + θ221 + · · · + θN2N−1, k − 1 = φ120 + φ221 + · · · + φL2L−1 MN,L =      Z1,1 Z1,2 · · · Z1,2L Z2,1 Z2,2 · · · Z2,2L . . . . . . ... . . . Z2N,1 Z2N,2 · · · Z2N,2L      , Zfree =

2N

  • j=1

2L

  • k=1

Zj,k. (2)

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 6 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Free-Boundary decomposition

a = b = c = 1

M2,2 =     18 8 10 10 10 10 8 8     M2,3 =     44 20 20 20 26 24 26 16 26 24 26 16 26 20 20 20     M3,2 =            44 26 26 26 24 24 20 20 26 26 20 20 20 20 16 16            M3,3 =            148 84 84 84 94 84 94 72 84 80 84 72 84 74 72 74 94 84 94 72 84 72 76 72 84 74 72 74 72 72 72 68           

selection rule Mod [Φ − Θ, 2] = 0 Z N×L

j,k

= Z L×N

k,j

Z1,1 = ΩP,P is the largest element for ∆ = 1

2

ΩPP ≤ Ωfree ≤ 2L+N−1ΩPP ⇒ SPP = Sfree. (3)

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 7 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Free-Boundary decomposition

∆ = 1

2

We have more generally that the largest element is ZPP for ∆ ≥ −1 and Largest contribution for ∆ < −1 L even, N even ZPP L even, N odd ZPA L odd, N even ZAP L odd, N odd ZAA This scenario was verified for L, N up to six. Ffree = Fmax (4)

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 8 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Homogeneous Toroidal Boundaries The homogenous toroidal boundaries are those where there is no change from periodic to anti-periodic along the horizontal or the vertical direction. They are: Z11 = ZPP = TrV

  • T (0)N

(5) Z2N 1 = ZAP = TrV

  • T (1)N

(6) Z12L = ZPA = TrV

  • Πx

T (0)N (7) Z2N 2L = ZAA = TrV

  • Πx

T (1)N (8) Both T (0) and T (1) can be diagonalized, and due to the discrete symmetries:

  • T (0)(λ), Πx

=

  • T (0)(λ), Πz

= 0, (9)

  • T (1)(λ), Πx

=

  • T (1)(λ), Πz

+ = 0,

(10) Πx Πz = (−1)LΠz Πx , (11) where Πx = L

m=1 σx is the reflection operator and Πz = L m=1 σz is the parity operator, we can see that all four

free-energies above can be obtained. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 9 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Homogeneous Toroidal Boundaries The homogenous toroidal boundaries are those where there is no change from periodic to anti-periodic along the horizontal or the vertical direction. They are: Z11 = ZPP = TrV

  • T (0)N

=

2L

  • j=1
  • Λ(0)

j

N (5) Z2N 1 = ZAP = TrV

  • T (1)N

= (1 + (−1)N )

2L−1

  • j=1
  • Λ(1)

j

N (6) Z12L = ZPA = TrV

  • Πx

T (0)N =

2L

  • j=1

(−1)px

j

  • Λ0

j

N (7) Z2N 2L = ZAA = TrV

  • Πx

T (1)N = (1 + (−1)N+L)

2L−1

  • j=1

(−1)px

j

  • Λ(1)

j

N (8) Both T (0) and T (1) can be diagonalized, and due to the discrete symmetries:

  • T (0)(λ), Πx

=

  • T (0)(λ), Πz

= 0, (9)

  • T (1)(λ), Πx

=

  • T (1)(λ), Πz

+ = 0,

(10) Πx Πz = (−1)LΠz Πx , (11) where Πx = L

m=1 σx is the reflection operator and Πz = L m=1 σz is the parity operator, we can see that all four

free-energies above can be obtained. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 9 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Homogeneous Toroidal Boundaries

Batchelor et. al. ⇒ FAP = FPP for ∆ < −1, therefore lim

L→∞

1 L ln Λ(1)

max = lim L→∞

1 L ln Λ(0)

max

∆ < −1, (12) hence we have FPP = FAP = FPA = FAA, (13) whenever they are allowed by selection rule. Therefore Ffree = FPP ∀∆ (14) Note that there is no restriction over the parity of lattice size

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 10 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Mixed Toroidal Boundaries: First Row

The First Row of MN,L is given by: Z1,j = TrV

  • L
  • m=1

G(φm)

Vm (T (0))N

  • =

2L

  • g=1
  • Λ(0)

g

N f {φm}

L,g

, (15) f {φm}

L,g

=

  • g(0)
  • L
  • m=1

G(φm)

Vm

  • g(0)

(16) Since T (0) commutes with Sz, we can choose eigenvectors to live in a definite sector of Sz. Therefore we have to have Φ even, otherwise f {φm}

L,g

will be zero. Perron-Frobenius theorem ⇒ f {φm}

L,g

is non-negative for maximal eigenvectors of each sector. How could f {φm}

L,g

change the free-energy? It should decay as fast as e−δLN. But this impossible since it only depends on L!

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 11 / 37

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First Part: Free and Toroidal Boundary Conditions Mixed Toroidal Boundaries: First Row

∆ ≤ 1 ⇒ n = ⌊ L

2⌋

⇒ F1,j = − limL→∞ 1

L ln Λ(0) max = FPP

∆ > 1 ⇒ n = 0 ⇒ F1,j = − limL→∞ 1

L ln Λ(0) max, Φ

2 = FPP?

Because for ∆ > 1 we have Λmax,n=0 > Λmax,n=1 . . . > Λmax,n=⌊ L

2 ⌋, but

fmax,n< Φ

2 = 0.

Bethe ansatz solution reveals that limL→∞ 1

L ln Λ(0) max,n = limL→∞ 1 L ln Λ(0) max,0

F1,j = FPP ∀∆ (17) Conjecture: Fi,j = FPP ∀∆ (18)

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 12 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions

Second Part: Fixed Boundaries

Although is very probable that Fi,j = FPBC for all mixtures of local periodicity and anti-periodicity, we already know some fixed boundary conditions with intensive properties differing from PBC. Therefore we should search for different types of fixed boundary conditions!

Θ1 1 Θ2 1 Θ3 0 Θ4 0 Θ5 0 Φ1 0 Φ2 1 Φ3 0 Φ4 0 Φ5 1

This Boundary can be viewed as

  • ne term in the summation of

Z10,25 {0, 1, 0, 0, 1}2 = 10 − 1 {1, 1, 0, 0, 0}2 = 25 − 1

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 13 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants

Since there are so many fixed boundary conditions, we have chosen to search for boundaries with the same number of configurations as Domain-Wall(DW). Scanning over all fixed boundaries with N = 3, N = 4, N = 5 we found:

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 14 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 15 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 16 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 17 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 18 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 19 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 20 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants

Scanning over all fixed boundaries with N = 3, N = 4 and N = 5 gives 32 different boundaries with the same number of configurations

  • f DW, Ω = 7, Ω = 42 and Ω = 429,respectively.

Is there a pattern for these boundaries? Can we group them in a family?

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 21 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants

s1 s1 s2 s2 s3 s3 s4 s4

Corner edges satisfy an isolated arrow conservation 24 corners × 2 DW = 32 Can we find a determinant formula for the partition function of these boundaries?

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 22 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants The simplest example: s1 = s2 = s4 = −, and s3 = +. In QISM formulation ZN({λ}, {µ}) = ⇓N| B(λN) . . . B(λ2)D(λ1)

  • ↓⇑N−1
  • ,

using two-site decomposition (Bogoliubov, Pronko, Zvonarev.2002): TA(λ) =

  • AN−1(λ)

BN−1(λ) CN−1(λ) DN−1(λ) A1(λ) B1(λ) C1(λ) D1(λ)

  • ,

(19) we can derive the following relation, ZN ({λ}, {µ}) =

N

  • j=1

rj

  • ⇓N−1
  • N
  • k=j+1

BN−1(λk )DN−1(λj )

  • j−1
  • k=1

BN−1(λk )

  • ⇑N−1
  • ,

(20) where r1 = a(λ1 − µ1)

N

  • m=2

b(λm − µ1), r2 = c(λ1 − µ1)c(λ2 − µ1) a(λ1 − µ1)b(λ2 − µ1) r1, rj = a(λj−1 − µ1)c(λj − µ1) c(λj−1 − µ1)b(λj − µ1) rj−1 j = 3, . . . , N. (21) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 23 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants Using Yang-Baxter Algebra D(λj )

  • j−1
  • m=1

B(λm) =

j

  • k=1

βjk

  • j
  • m=1

m=k

B(λm)D(λk ), (22) where βjk =                − c(λj − λk ) b(λj − λk )

j

  • i=1

i=k

a(λk − λi ) b(λk − λi ) , k = j,

j−1

  • i=1

a(λj − λi ) b(λj − λi ) , k = j. (23) The recursion relation: ZN ({λ}, {µ}) =

N

  • k=1

ZDWBC

N−1

({λ} \ λk , {µ} \ µ1)  (b(λk ))N−1

N

  • j=k

rj βjk   . (24) Using DW determinant formula(Izergin, Coker, Korepin.1992) ZDWBC

N

({λ}, {µ}) = fN({λ}, {µ}) det

  • ρ(λi , µj )

j=1,...,N

i=1,...,N ,

(25) in the relation (24) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 24 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants We finally obtain that ZN({λ}, {µ}) =

  • δ1

ρ(λ1, µ2) ρ(λ1, µ3) . . . ρ(λ1, µN) δ2 ρ(λ2, µ2) ρ(λ2, µ3) . . . ρ(λ2, µN) . . . . . . . . . ... . . . δN ρ(λN, µ2) ρ(λN , µ3) . . . ρ(λN, µN)

  • ,

(26) where δk , ρ(λ, µ) and fN({λ}, {µ}) are given by δk = (−1)1+k fN−1({λ} \ λk , {µ} \ µ1)bN−1(λk )

N

  • j=k

rj βjk , (27) ρ(λ, µ) = c(λ − µ) a(λ − µ)b(λ − µ) , (28) fN({λ}, {µ}) =

N

  • i,j=1

i<j

(cij cji bii bjj + cii cjj aij aji )(cii cjj bij bji + cij cji aii ajj ) ρii ρjj (cij cji bii bjj + cii cjj aij aji ) − ρij ρji (cij cji aii ajj + cii cjj bij bji ) N

i=1 (aii bii )N−2

, (29) and we have denoted aij = a(λi − µj ) and so on. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 25 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants

Further comments on dDWBC

Isolated arrow conservation rule extension

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 26 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions The Domain-Wall descendants

Further comments on dDWBC

Isolated arrow conservation rule extension N larger than 5 N = 6 ⇒ Ω = 7436 , the DW number! There are a total of 160 boundaries sharing the same Ω!

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 26 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

A natural question: Which fixed boundary condition has the largest Ω?

Looking at N = 3 could lead us to wrong conclusions. In this case the dDWBC are the family with the largest number of configurations. At N = 4 this is not the case anymore. While dDWBC has 42 configurations, the largest number is 64. The related boundary is This new boundary satisfy the isolated arrow conservation rule! 32 boundaries with the same Ω.

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 27 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

Here the number 32 of boundaries with largest number of configurations remains the same for N = 6! N 3 4 5 6 Ω 7 64 1322 64934

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 28 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

Here the number 32 of boundaries with largest number of configurations remains the same for N = 6! N 3 4 5 6 Ω 7 64 1322 64934 Separation of families!

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 28 / 37

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SLIDE 33

Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

Is it possible to obtain the number of configurations as a function of n? Can we find a determinant formula? QISM Representation: Z NE

N ({λ}, {µ}) = ↑↓ . . . ↑↓| D(λN)A(λN−1) · · · D(λ2)A(λ1) |↑↓ . . . ↑↓ ,

(30) [A(λ), D(µ)] = 0 (31) [D(λ)A(λ), D(µ)A(µ)] = 0 (32)

  • D(λ)A(λ), (D(λ)A(λ))t

= 0 (33) No Universal eigenstates! No normality, except at infinite temperature point! [A(λ), Sz] = [D(λ), Sz] = [D(λ)A(µ), Sz] = 0. (34)

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 29 / 37

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SLIDE 34

Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

Is it possible to obtain the number of configurations as a function of n? Can we find a determinant formula? QISM Representation: Z NE

N ({λ}, {µ}) = ↑↓ . . . ↑↓| D(λN)A(λN−1) · · · D(λ2)A(λ1) |↑↓ . . . ↑↓ ,

(30) [A(λ), D(µ)] = 0 (31) [D(λ)A(λ), D(µ)A(µ)] = 0 (32)

  • D(λ)A(λ), (D(λ)A(λ))t

= 0 (33) No Universal eigenstates! No normality, except at infinite temperature point! [A(λ), Sz] = [D(λ), Sz] = [D(λ)A(µ), Sz] = 0. (34) Nevertheless we still can get some information without actually calculating the exact number of configurations. We have the following inequality Ωmax,fix ≤ Ωfree ≤ 22N+2LΩmax,fix ⇒ Sfree = SPBC = Smax,fix (35) Our conjecture is: max, fix ≡ NE.

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 29 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition N number of states

1 1 2 2 3 7 4 64 5 1322 6 64914 7 7474305 8 2033739170 9 1305583070738 10 1981880443295788 11 7111657020627320662 12 60382974032926242142168 13 1213039653244899907872180826 14 57687270950680153355854587442676 15 6494209210696211480439308528411663853 16 1731204438495421321106461120147832169010790 17 1092829001103470428650265862752651675963745966742 18 1633892840599915791908254127642749411000513938128114064 19 5785898354977820698935460290451680551971080689572072829375890 20 48534629904275880189653389798729712740901732087151544103619504415896

Table: Number of configurations for N´ eel boundary condition.

We have tried some sequence solvers, but they could’nt obtain the general term nor predict the next number. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 30 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 S N NE PBC 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 0.35 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 (SPBC-SNE)/SPBC 1/N SNE = SPBC (1 − γ N ) γ ∼ 2 (36) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 31 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions N´ eel Boundary Condition

Still not convinced?

SN = log Ω N2 = log(cNω) N2 = log cN N2 + log ω N2 ≈ log ω N2 , (37) where cN is of order of the unity. Therefore, we should count digits or some other exponential growth! N number of digits difference

3 1 4 2 1 5 4 2 6 5 1 7 7 2 8 10 3 9 13 3 10 16 3 11 19 3 12 23 4 13 28 5 14 32 4 15 37 5 16 43 6 17 49 6 18 55 6 19 61 6 20 68 7

S4k+3 ≈ 1 + k

j=1 6j

  • (4k + 3)2

log(10) = 2 + (1 + 6k)k 2(4k + 3)2 log(10), (38) taking thermodynamic limit k → ∞, we find S = 3 16 log(10) = 0.431735... (39) compare with SPBC = 3 2 log( 4 3 ) = 0.431523... (40) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 32 / 37

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SLIDE 38

Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries By now we know that there are at least three possible outcomes for the entropy of 6 V: SFE = 0 SdDWBC = 1 2 ln(27/16) SPBC = 3 2 ln(4/3), (41) Are all the values between SFE and SPBC accessible? To answer this question we introduced what we call Merge-type boundaries n n Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 33 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries

DW-FE Fusion

n n

ZDWFE

N

N

i=1

N

j=n+1 b(λi − µj )

N

i=n+1

N

j=1 a(λi − µj )

= ZDW

n

(42) SDWFE = lim

N→∞

n N 2 SDW (43) Choosing a suitable sequence n(N), one can obtain any value of entropy S such that SFE ≤ S ≤ SDW (44) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 34 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries

DW-FE Fusion

n n

ZDWFE

N

N

i=1

N

j=n+1 b(λi − µj )

N

i=n+1

N

j=1 a(λi − µj )

= ZDW

n

(42) SDWFE = lim

N→∞

n N 2 SDW (43) Choosing a suitable sequence n(N), one can obtain any value of entropy S such that SFE ≤ S ≤ SDW (44) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 34 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries

NE-FE Fusion

n n

Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 35 / 37

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Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries

NE-FE Fusion

Conjecture: 0 ≤ SNEFE ≤ SPBC for a suitable chosen sequence n(N)

n n

L-shaped partition function. Colomo and Pronko(2015) Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 35 / 37

slide-43
SLIDE 43

Second Part: Fixed Boundary Conditions Merge type Boundaries

NE-FE Fusion

Conjecture: 0 ≤ SNEFE ≤ SPBC for a suitable chosen sequence n(N)

n n

L-shaped partition function. Colomo and Pronko(2015) SNEFE

n+1

− SNEFE

n

≤ O( 1 N ) (45)

5 10 15 20 n 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4

SNEFE N20

5 10 15 20 N 0.05 0.10 0.15

Sn1

NEFESn NEFE

nN 2

  • Tavares (UFSCar)

Florence 2015 11/06/2015 35 / 37

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SLIDE 44

Final Remarks and Open Questions We argued that the free-energy for boundaries mixing periodic and anti-periodic closings should be the same as PBC and free-boundary. We found a family of 32 fixed boundary conditions with same number of configurations as DW. There are other fixed boundary conditions whose number of configurations coincide with DW, but we were not able to classify them in the same family. We introduced the N´ eel boundary condition, whose number of configurations we believe to be the largest one among all fixed boundaries. From that we conclude SNE = SPBC , but there is no rigorous proof that N´ eel is indeed maximal.

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 a c b c

Assuming the last result to be true, is F NE = F PBC for all a, b, c? Is it possible to find the exact number of configurations for all N? Does integrability play any role for this boundary? We introduced the Merge type boundaries and proved that the entropy may take any value between SFE and SDW . If one can prove the “continuity” of entropy for merge-type boundaries and that NE is maximal, then we can extend SDW to SPBC in the above assertion. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 36 / 37

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SLIDE 45

Final Remarks and Open Questions

References

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  • F. Colomo and A.G. Pronko, thermodynamics of the six-vertex model in an L-shaped domain, arXiv:1501.03135

GAP Ribeiro and VE Korepin, J. Phys. A: Math. Theor. 48 (2015) 045205. TS Tavares, GAP Ribeiro and VE Korepin, to appear in J.Stat.Mech (arXiv:1501.02818 [cond-mat.stat-mech]). Acknowledgments C.N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics at Stony Brook for hospitality and the Brazilian agency FAPESP for financial support through the grant 2013/17338-4. Tavares (UFSCar) Florence 2015 11/06/2015 37 / 37