Spin and charge modulations in a single hole doped Hubbard ladder -- verification with optical lattice experiments

Abstract

We show that pronounced modulations in spin and charge densities can be induced by the insertion of a single hole in an otherwise half-filled 2-leg Hubbard ladder. Accompanied with these modulations is a loosely bound structure of the doped charge with a spin-1/2, in contrast to the tightly bound case where such modulations are absent. These behaviors are caused by the interference of the Berry phases associated a string of flipped spins (or "phase strings") left behind as a hole travels through a spin bath with a short-range anti-ferromagnetic order. The key role of the phase strings is also reflected in how the system respond to increasing spin polarization, increasing the on-site repulsion, addition of a second hole, and increasing asymmetry between intra- and inter-chain hopping. Remarkably, all these properties persist down to ladders as short as 10 sites. They can therefore be studied in cold atom experiments using the recently developed fermion microscope.

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