Finite-temperature real-time properties of magnetic polarons in two-dimensional quantum antiferromagnets
Abstract
Due to significant progress in quantum gas microscopy in recent years, there is a rapidly growing interest in real-space properties of single mobile dopands created in correlated antiferromagnetic (AFM) Mott insulators. However, a detailed numerical description remains challenging, even for simple toy models. As a consequence, previous numerical simulations for large systems were largely limited to T=0. To provide guidance for cold-atom experiments, numerical calculations at finite temperature are required. Here, we numerically study the real-time properties of a single mobile hole in the 2D t-J model at finite temperature and draw a comparison to features observed at T=0. We find that a three-stage process of hole motion, which was reported at T=0, is valid even at finite temperature. However, already at low temperatures, the average hole velocity at long times is not simply proportional to the spin coupling, contrary to the T=0 behavior. Comparing our finite-temperature numerical results with the experimental data from quantum gas microscopy we find a qualitative disagreement: in experiment, hole spreading speeds up with increasing J/t, while in our numerics it slows down. The latter is consistent with the numerical findings previously reported at T=0.
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