Destroying a topological quantum bit by condensing Ising vortices

Abstract

The imminent realization of topologically-protected qubits in fabricated systems will provide not only an elementary implementation of fault-tolerant quantum computing architecture, but also an experimental vehicle for the general study of topological order. The simplest topological qubit harbors what is known as a Z2 liquid phase, which encodes information via a degeneracy depending on the system's topology. Elementary excitations of the phase are fractionally charged objects called spinons, or Ising flux vortices called visons. At zero temperature a Z2 liquid is stable under deformations of the Hamiltonian until spinon or vison condensation induces a quantum phase transition destroying the topological order. In this paper, we use quantum Monte Carlo to study a vison-induced transition from a Z2 liquid to a valence-bond solid in a quantum dimer model on the kagome lattice. Our results indicate that this critical point is controlled by a new universality class beyond the standard Landau paradigm.

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