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The quantum clock model is a quantum lattice model. It is a generalisation of the
transverse-field Ising model The transverse field Ising model is a quantum version of the classical Ising model. It features a lattice with nearest neighbour interactions determined by the alignment or anti-alignment of spin projections along the z axis, as well as an externa ...
. It is defined on a lattice with N states on each site. The Hamiltonian of this model is :H = -J \left( \sum_ (Z^\dagger_i Z_j + Z_i Z^\dagger_j ) + g \sum_j (X_j + X^\dagger_j) \right) Here, the subscripts refer to lattice sites, and the sum \sum_ is done over pairs of nearest neighbour sites i and j. The clock matrices X_j and Z_j are N \times N generalisations of the Pauli matrices satisfying : Z_j X_k = e^ X_k Z_j and X_j^N = Z_j^N = 1 where \delta_ is 1 if j and k are the same site and zero otherwise. J is a prefactor with dimensions of energy, and g is another coupling coefficient that determines the relative strength of the external field compared to the nearest neighbor interaction. The model obeys a global \mathbb_N symmetry, which is generated by the unitary operator U_X = \prod_j X_j where the product is over every site of the lattice. In other words, U_X commutes with the Hamiltonian. When N=2 the quantum clock model is identical to the transverse-field Ising model. When N=3 the quantum clock model is equivalent to the quantum three-state Potts model. When N=4, the model is again equivalent to the Ising model. When N>4, strong evidences have been found that the phase transitions exhibited in these models should be certain generalizations of Kosterlitz–Thouless transition, whose physical nature is still largely unknown.


One-dimensional model

There are various analytical methods that can be used to study the quantum clock model specifically in one dimension.


Kramers–Wannier duality

A nonlocal mapping of clock matrices known as the Kramers–Wannier duality transformation can be done as follows: \begin\tilde &= Z^\dagger_j Z_ \\ \tilde^\dagger_j \tilde_ &= X_ \end Then, in terms of the newly defined clock matrices with tildes, which obey the same algebraic relations as the original clock matrices, the Hamiltonian is simply H = -Jg \sum_j ( \tilde^\dagger_j \tilde_ + g^\tilde^\dagger_ + \textrm ). This indicates that the model with coupling parameter g is dual to the model with coupling parameter g^, and establishes a duality between the ordered phase and the disordered phase. Note that there are some subtle considerations at the boundaries of the one dimensional chain; as a result of these, the degeneracy and \mathbb_N symmetry properties of phases are changed under the Kramers–Wannier duality. A more careful analysis involves coupling the theory to a \mathbb_N gauge field; fixing the gauge reproduces the results of the Kramers Wannier transformation.


Phase transition

For N=2,3,4, there is a unique phase transition from the ordered phase to the disordered phase at g=1. The model is said to be "self-dual" because Kramers–Wannier transformation transforms the Hamiltonian to itself. For N>4, there are two phase transition points at g_1<1 and g_2=1/g_1>1. Strong evidences have been found that these phase transitions should be a class of generalizations of Kosterlitz–Thouless transition. The KT transition predicts that the free energy has an essential singularity that goes like e^, while perturbative study found that the essential singularity behaves as e^ where \sigma goes from 0.2 to 0.5 as N increases from 5 to 9. The physical pictures of these phase transitions are still not clear.


Jordan–Wigner transformation

Another nonlocal mapping known as the Jordan Wigner transformation can be used to express the theory in terms of parafermions.


References

{{Reflist Mathematical modeling Quantum lattice models