Subir Sachdev

Subir Sachdev is Herchel Smith Professor of Physics[1] at Harvard University specializing in condensed matter. He was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 2014, and received the Lars Onsager Prize from the American Physical Society and the Dirac Medal from the ICTP in 2018.

Subir Sachdev
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S),
Harvard University (Ph.D)
Known forTheories of critical and topological states of quantum matter;
SYK model of non-Fermi liquids and quantum black holes
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsCondensed matter theory
ThesisFrustration and Order in Rapidly Cooled Metals (1985)
Doctoral advisorD. R. Nelson
Websiteqpt.physics.harvard.edu/cv.html

Sachdev's research describes the connection between physical properties of modern quantum materials and the nature of quantum entanglement in the many-particle wavefunction. Sachdev has made extensive contributions to the description of the diverse varieties of entangled states of quantum matter. These include states with topological order, with and without an energy gap to excitations, and critical states without quasiparticle excitations. Many of these contributions have been linked to experiments, especially to the rich phase diagrams of the high temperature superconductors.

Strange metals and black holes

Extreme examples of complex quantum entanglement arise in metallic states of matter without quasiparticle excitations, often called strange metals. Remarkably, there is an intimate connection between the quantum physics of strange metals found in modern materials (which can be studied in tabletop experiments), and quantum entanglement near black holes of astrophysics.

This connection is most clearly seen by first thinking more carefully about the defining characteristic of a strange metal: the absence of quasiparticles. In practice, given a state of quantum matter, it is difficult to completely rule out the existence of quasiparticles: while one can confirm that certain perturbations do not create single quasiparticle excitations, it is almost impossible to rule out a non-local operator which could create an exotic quasiparticle in which the underlying electrons are non-locally entangled. Sachdev argued[2][3] instead that it is better to examine how rapidly the system loses quantum phase coherence, or reaches local thermal equilibrium in response to general external perturbations. If quasiparticles existed, dephasing would take a long time during which the excited quasiparticles collide with each other. In contrast, states without quasiparticles reach local thermal equilibrium in the fastest possible time, bounded below by a value of order (Planck constant)/((Boltzmann constant) x (absolute temperature)).[2] Sachdev proposed[4][5] a solvable model of a strange metal (a variant of which is now called the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model), which was shown to saturate such a bound on the time to reach quantum chaos.[6]

We can now make the connection to the quantum theory of black holes: quite generally, black holes also thermalize and reach quantum chaos in a time of order (Planck constant)/((Boltzmann constant) x (absolute temperature)),[7][8] where the absolute temperature is the black hole's Hawking temperature. And this similarity to quantum matter without quasiparticles is not a co-incidence: for the SYK models, Sachdev had argued[9] that the strange metal has a holographic dual description in terms of the quantum theory of black holes in a curved spacetime with 1 space dimension.

This connection, and other related work by Sachdev and collaborators, have led to valuable insights on the properties of electronic quantum matter, and on the nature of Hawking radiation from black holes. Solvable models of strange metals obtained from the gravitational mapping have inspired analyses of more realistic models of strange metals in the high temperature superconductors and other compounds. Such predictions have been connected to experiments, including some[10] that are in good quantitative agreement with observations on graphene.[11][12] These topics are discussed in more detail in Research.

Career

Sachdev attended school at St. Joseph's Boys' High School, Bangalore and Kendriya Vidyalaya, ASC, Bangalore. He attended college at Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi for a year. He took transfer to Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he graduated in Physics. He received his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Harvard University. He held professional positions at Bell Labs (1985–1987) and at Yale University (1987–2005), where he was a Professor of Physics, before returning to Harvard, where he is now the Herchel Smith Professor of Physics. He has also held visiting positions as the Cenovus Energy James Clerk Maxwell Chair in Theoretical Physics [13] at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, and the Dr. Homi J. Bhabha Chair Professorship[14] at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.

Honors

Subir Sachdev has made pioneering contributions to many areas of theoretical condensed matter physics. Of particular importance were the development of the theory of quantum critical phenomena in insulators, superconductors and metals; the theory of spin-liquid states of quantum antiferromagnets and the theory of fractionalized phases of matter; the study of novel deconfinement phase transitions; the theory of quantum matter without quasiparticles; and the application of many of these ideas to a priori unrelated problems in black hole physics, including a concrete model of non-Fermi liquids.

for his seminal contributions to the theory of quantum phase transitions, quantum magnetism, and fractionalized spin liquids, and for his leadership in the physics community.

The Dirac Medal was awarded to Professor Sachdev in recognition of his many seminal contributions to the theory of strongly interacting condensed matter systems: quantum phase transitions, including the idea of critical deconfinement and the breakdown of the conventional symmetry based Landau-Ginsburg-Wilson paradigm; the prediction of exotic 'spin-liquid' and fractionalized states; and applications to the theory of high-temperature superconductivity in the cuprate materials.

Sachdev has made seminal advances in the theory of condensed matter systems near a quantum phase transition, which have elucidated the rich variety of static and dynamic behavior in such systems, both at finite temperatures and at T=0. His book, Quantum Phase Transitions,[2] is the basic text of the field.

Research

Quantum phases of antiferromagnets

Sachdev has worked extensively on the quantum theory of antiferromagnetism, especially in two-dimensional lattices. Some of the spin liquid states of antiferromagnets can be described by examining the quantum phase transitions out of magnetically ordered states. Such an approach leads to a theory of emergent gauge fields and excitations in the spin liquid states. It is convenient to consider two classes of magnetic order separately: those with collinear and non-collinear spin order. For the case of collinear antiferromagnetism (as in the Néel state), the transition leads to a spin liquid with a U(1) gauge field, while non-collinear antiferromagnetism has a transition to a spin liquid with a Z2 gauge field.

  • The U(1) spin liquid is unstable at the longest length scales to the condensation of monopoles, and the Berry phases of the condensing monopoles lead to valence bond solid (VBS) order.[28][29]
  • The Z2 spin liquid was shown to be stable,[30][31][32] and this was the first realization of a stable quantum state with time-reversal symmetry, emergent gauge fields, topological order, and anyon excitations. The topological order and anyons were later identified with the e, m and ε particles of the toric code (see also the independent work[33] of Xiao-Gang Wen). The topological structure and excitations of the Z2 spin liquid were identified with those of a compact U(1) gauge theory coupled to a charge 2 Higgs scalar, along with Berry phase terms.[31] In a strong-coupling limit, this theory is equivalent to a Z2 gauge theory, and, after a duality transform, to a frustrated quantum Ising model.[34][35][36] These models were also derived from a quantum dimer model.[35][36] The same quantum dimer model appeared as the strong interaction limit of a model of bosons on the square lattice.[37][38]

These results agree with numerous numerical studies of model quantum spin systems in two dimensions.

Turning to experiments, VBS order was predicted[39] by this mechanism in SrCu2(BO3)2, and has been observed by neutron scattering.[40] A particular Z2 spin liquid state proposed for the kagome lattice antiferromagnet[32] agrees well with a tensor network analysis,[41] and has been proposed[42] to describe neutron scattering and NMR experiments on herbertsmithite.[43][44] A gapped spin liquid state has also been observed[45][46] in the kagome lattice compound Cu3Zn(OH)6FBr, and is likely to be a Z2 spin liquid.[47]

Quantum criticality

Sachdev proposed that the anomalous dynamic properties of the cuprate superconductors, and other correlated electron compounds, could be understood by proximity to a quantum critical fixed point. In the quantum critical regime of a non-trivial renormalization group fixed point (in higher than one spatial dimension) the dynamics is characterized by the absence of quasiparticles, and a local equilibration time of order ħ/(kBT). This time was proposed to be the shortest possible such time in all quantum systems.[2] Transport measurements have since shown that this bound is close to saturation in many correlated metals.[48] Sachdev has made numerous contributions to quantum field theories of quantum criticality in insulators, superconductors, and metals.[2]

Confinement transitions of gauge theories, and deconfined criticality

Traditionally, classical and quantum phase transitions, have been described in terms of the Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson paradigm. The broken symmetry in one of the phases identifies as order parameter; the action for the order parameter is expressed as a field theory which controls fluctuations at and across the critical point. Deconfined critical points describe a new class of phase transitions in which the field theory is not expressed in terms of the order parameter. Broken symmetry and order parameters, or topological order, are present in one or both of the adjacent phases. The critical field theory is expressed in terms of deconfined fractionalized degrees of freedom that cannot exist in isolation outside the sample.

Ising gauge theories: Franz Wegner introduced[49] Ising lattice gauge theories, and their transition between confining and deconfined phases, signaled by a change in the value of the Wilson loop of the gauge field from area law to perimeter law. Wegner also argued that confinement transition of this theory had no local order parameter, but was instead described by a dual Ising model in 3 dimensions. This conclusion turns out to need a crucial extension. One of the implications of Sachdev's work on emergent gauge fields in two-dimensional antiferromagnets[30][31][34] was that the deconfined phase of the 2+1 dimensional Ising gauge theory had Z2 topological order. The presence of topological order in one of the phases implies that this is an Ising* transition, in which we only select states and operators which are invariant under global Ising inversion; see a recent numerical study[50] for observable consequences of this restriction. The Ising field represents a fractionalized excitation of the deconfined phase, the "vison" (or the m particle) carrying a quantum of Z2 gauge flux, and visons can only be created in pairs. The confinement transition is driven by the condensation of deconfined visons, and so this is an example of a deconfined quantum critical point, although there is no gapless gauge field.

Odd Ising gauge theories: The notion of deconfined criticality becomes more crucial in studying the confinement transitions of "odd" Ising gauge theories[34][35][36] out of the deconfined phase with Z2 topological order; now the critical theory has fractionalized excitations and a gapless gauge field. In the context of two-dimensional antiferromagnets with half-integer spin per unit cell, the effective description in terms of Ising gauge theories requires a background static electric charge on each site: this is the odd Ising gauge theory. We can write the Ising gauge theory as the strong coupling limit of a compact U(1) gauge theory in the presence of a charge 2 Higgs field.[51] The presence of the background electric charges implies that the monopoles of the U(1) field carry Berry phases,[34] and transform non-trivially under the space group of the lattice. As the monopoles condense in the confining phase, an immediate consequence is that the confining phase must break the space group by the development of valence bond solid (VBS) order. Furthermore, the Berry phases lead to suppression of monopoles at the critical point, so that, on the square lattice, the critical theory has a deconfined U(1) gauge field coupled to a critical charged scalar.[52] Note that the critical theory is not expressed in terms of the VBS order as would be required by the LGW paradigm (which ignores the Z2 topological order in the deconfined phase). Instead, a dual version of the U(1) gauge theory is written in terms of a "square root" of the VBS order.[34]

Onset of non-collinear antiferromagnetism: Another example of deconfined criticality in two dimensional antiferromagnets appears in the condensation of particles with electric charges (the e particle, or the spinon) from the deconfined phase of the Z2 gauge theory. As the spinon also carries quantum numbers of global spin rotations, this leads to a "Higgs" phase of the Z2 gauge theory with antiferromagnetic order and broken spin rotation symmetry;[53] here the antiferromagnetic order parameter has SO(3) symmetry, and so should the LGW critical theory; but the deconfined critical theory for the spinons has an exact SU(2) symmetry (which is further enlarged to O(4) after neglecting irrelevant terms).

Néel-VBS transition: A more subtle class of deconfined critical points has confining phases on both sides, and the fractionalized excitations present only at the critical point.[52][54][55][56] The best studied examples of this class are quantum antiferromagnets with SU(N) symmetry on the square lattice. These exhibit a phase transition from a state with collinear antiferromagnetic order to a valence bond solid,[28][29] but the critical theory is expressed in terms of spinons coupled to an emergent U(1) gauge field.[52][54][57] The study of this transition involved the first computation[58] of the scaling dimension of a monopole operator in a conformal field theory in 2+1 dimensions; more precise computations[59][60] to order 1/N are in good accord with numerical studies[61] of the Néel-VBS transition.

SYK model of non-Fermi liquids and black holes

Sachdev, and his first graduate student Jinwu Ye, proposed[4] an exactly solvable model of a non-Fermi liquid, a variant of which is now called the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model. Its fermion correlators have a power-law decay,[4] which was found[62] to extend to a conformally invariant form at non-zero temperatures. The SYK model was also found [63] to have a non-zero entropy per site in the limit of vanishing temperature (this is not equivalent to an exponentially large ground state degeneracy: instead, it is due to an exponentially small many-body level spacing, which extends across the spectrum down to the lowest energies). Based on these observations, Sachdev first proposed[9][5] that the model is holographically dual to quantum gravity on AdS2, and identified its low temperature entropy with the Bekenstein-Hawking black hole entropy. Unlike previous models of quantum gravity, it appears that the SYK model is solvable in a regime which accounts for the subtle non-thermal correlations in the Hawking radiation.

One-dimensional quantum systems with an energy gap

Sachdev and colloborators developed a formally exact theory for the non-zero temperature dynamics and transport of one-dimensional quantum systems with an energy gap.[64][65][66] The diluteness of the quasiparticle excitations at low temperature allowed the use of semi-classical methods. The results were in good quantitative agreement with NMR[67] and subsequent neutron scattering[68] observations on S=1 spin chains, and with NMR[69] on the Transverse Field Ising chain compound CoNb2O6

Quantum impurities

The traditional Kondo effect involves a local quantum degree of freedom interacting with a Fermi liquid or Luttinger liquid in the bulk. Sachdev described cases where the bulk was a strongly-interacting critical state without quasiparticle excitations.[70][71][72] The impurity was characterized by a Curie suspectibility of an irrational spin, and a boundary entropy of an irrational number of states.

Ultracold atoms

Sachdev predicted[73] density wave order and 'magnetic' quantum criticality in tilted lattices of ultracold atoms. This was subsequently observed in experiments.[74][75] The modeling of tilted lattices inspired a more general model of interacting bosons in which a coherent external source can create and annihilate bosons on each site.[76] This model exhibits density waves of multiple periods, along with gapless incommensurate phases, and has been realized in experiments on trapped Rydberg atoms.[77]

Metals with topological order

Sachdev and collaborators proposed[78][79] a new metallic state, the fractionalized Fermi liquid (FL*): this has electron-like quasiparticles around a Fermi surface, enclosing a volume distinct from that required by Luttinger's theorem. A general argument was given that any such state must have very low energy excitations on a torus, not related to the low energy quasiparticles: these excitations are generally related to the emergent gauge fields of an associated spin liquid state. In other words, a non-Luttinger Fermi surface volume necessarily requires topological order.[79][80] The FL* phase must be separated from the conventional Fermi liquid (FL) by a quantum phase transition: this transition need not involve any broken symmetry, and examples were presented involving confinement/Higgs transitions of the gauge field. Sachdev and collaborators also described a related metal,[81] the algebraic charge liquid (ACL), which also has a Fermi surface with a non-Luttinger volume, with quasiparticles carrying charge but not spin. The FL* and ACL are both metals with topological order. Evidence has been accumulating that the pseudogap metal of the hole-doped cuprates is such a state.[82][83]

Quantum critical transport

Sachdev developed the theory of quantum transport at non-zero temperatures in the simplest model system without quasiparticle excitations: a conformal field theory in 2+1 dimensions, realized by the superfluid-insulator transitions of ultracold bosons in an optical lattice. A comprehensive picture emerged from quantum-Boltzmann equations,[3] the operator product expansion,[84] and holographic methods.[85][86][87][88] The latter mapped the dynamics to that in the vicinity of the horizon of a black hole. These were the first proposed connections between condensed matter quantum critical systems, hydrodynamics, and quantum gravity. These works eventually led to the theory of hydrodynamic transport in graphene, and the successful experimental predictions[12] described below.

Quantum matter without quasiparticles

Sachdev developed the theory of magneto-thermoelectric transport in 'strange' metals: these are states of quantum matter with variable density without quasiparticle excitations. Such metals are found, most famously, near optimal doping in the hole-doped cuprates, but also appear in numerous other correlated electron compounds. For strange metals in which momentum is approximately conserved, a set of hydrodynamic equations were proposed in 2007,[89] describing two-component transport with momentum drag component and a quantum-critical conductivity. This formulation was connected to the holography of charged black holes, memory functions, and new field-theoretic approaches.[90] These equations are valid when the electron-electron scattering time is much shorter than the electron-impurity scattering time, and they lead to specific predictions for the density, disorder, temperature, frequency, and magnetic field dependence of transport properties. Strange metal behavior obeying these hydrodynamic equations was predicted in graphene,[10][91] in the 'quantum critical' regime of weak disorder and moderate temperatures near the Dirac density. The theory quantitatively describes measurements of thermal and electrical transport in graphene,[12] and points to a regime of viscous, rather than Ohmic, electron flow. Extensions of this theory to Weyl metals pointed out the relevance of the axial-gravitational anomaly,[92] and made predictions for thermal transport which were confirmed in observations[93][94] (and highlighted in the New York Times).

Phases of the high temperature superconductors

High temperature superconductivity appears upon changing the electron density away from a two-dimensional antiferromagnet. Much attention has focused on the intermediate regime between the antiferromagnet and the optimal superconductor, where additional competing orders are found at low temperatures, and a "pseudogap" metal appears in the hole-doped cuprates. Sachdev's theories for the evolution of the competing order with magnetic field,[95][96] density, and temperature have been successfully compared with experiments.[97][98] Sachdev and collaborators proposed[99] a sign-problem free Monte Carlo method for studying the onset of antiferromagnetic order in metals: this yields a phase diagram with high temperature superconductivity similar to that found in many materials, and has led to much subsequent work describing the origin of high temperature superconductivity in realistic models of various materials. Nematic order was predicted for the iron-based superconductors,[100] and a new type of charge density wave, a d-form factor density wave, was predicted[101] for the hole-doped cuprates; both have been observed in numerous experiments.[102][103][104][105][106] The pseudogap metal of the hole-doped cuprates was argued[107] to be a metal with topological order, as discussed above, based partly on its natural connection to the d-form factor density wave. Soon after, the remarkable experiments of Badoux et al.[108] displayed evidence for a small Fermi surface state with topological order near optimal doping in YBCO, consistent with the overall theoretical picture presented in Sachdev's work.[82][83][109]

References

  1. "Subir Sachdev. Herchel Smith Professor of Physics, Harvard University". Official website.
  2. Sachdev, Subir (1999). Quantum phase transitions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-00454-3.
  3. Damle, Kedar; Sachdev, Subir (1997). "Nonzero-temperature transport near quantum critical points". Physical Review B. 56 (14): 8714–8733. arXiv:cond-mat/9705206. Bibcode:1997PhRvB..56.8714D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.56.8714. ISSN 0163-1829.
  4. Sachdev, Subir; Ye, Jinwu (1993). "Gapless spin-fluid ground state in a random quantum Heisenberg magnet". Physical Review Letters. 70 (21): 3339–3342. arXiv:cond-mat/9212030. Bibcode:1993PhRvL..70.3339S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.70.3339. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 10053843.
  5. Sachdev, Subir (2015). "Bekenstein-Hawking Entropy and Strange Metals". Physical Review X. 5 (4): 041025. arXiv:1506.05111. Bibcode:2015PhRvX...5d1025S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevX.5.041025. ISSN 2160-3308.
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  12. Crossno, J.; Shi, J. K.; Wang, K.; Liu, X.; Harzheim, A.; Lucas, A.; Sachdev, S.; Kim, P.; Taniguchi, T.; Watanabe, K.; Ohki, T. A.; Fong, K. C. (2016). "Observation of the Dirac fluid and the breakdown of the Wiedemann-Franz law in graphene". Science. 351 (6277): 1058–1061. arXiv:1509.04713. Bibcode:2016Sci...351.1058C. doi:10.1126/science.aad0343. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 26912362.
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  17. "INSA Foreign Fellows elected".
  18. Dirac Medallists 2018
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  21. "Subir Sachdev NAS member".
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  23. "Lorentz Chair".
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  27. "LeRoy Apker Award Recipient". American Physical Society. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
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