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Antiferromagnetic phase transition in a 3D fermionic Hubbard model.

Hou-Ji ShaoYu-Xuan WangDe-Zhi ZhuYan-Song ZhuHao-Nan SunSi-Yuan ChenChi ZhangZhi-Jie FanYoujin DengXing-Can YaoYu-Ao ChenJian-Wei Pan
Published in: Nature (2024)
The fermionic Hubbard model (FHM) 1 describes a wide range of physical phenomena resulting from strong electron-electron correlations, including conjectured mechanisms for unconventional superconductivity. Resolving its low-temperature physics is, however, challenging theoretically or numerically. Ultracold fermions in optical lattices 2,3 provide a clean and well-controlled platform offering a path to simulate the FHM. Doping the antiferromagnetic ground state of a FHM simulator at half-filling is expected to yield various exotic phases, including stripe order 4 , pseudogap 5 , and d-wave superfluid 6 , offering valuable insights into high-temperature superconductivity 7-9 . Although the observation of antiferromagnetic correlations over short 10 and extended distances 11 has been obtained, the antiferromagnetic phase has yet to be realized as it requires sufficiently low temperatures in a large and uniform quantum simulator. Here we report the observation of the antiferromagnetic phase transition in a three-dimensional fermionic Hubbard system comprising lithium-6 atoms in a uniform optical lattice with approximately 800,000 sites. When the interaction strength, temperature and doping concentration are finely tuned to approach their respective critical values, a sharp increase in the spin structure factor is observed. These observations can be well described by a power-law divergence, with a critical exponent of 1.396 from the Heisenberg universality class 12 . At half-filling and with optimal interaction strength, the measured spin structure factor reaches 123(8), signifying the establishment of an antiferromagnetic phase. Our results provide opportunities for exploring the low-temperature phase diagram of the FHM.
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