English

Dimer geometry, amoebae and a vortex dimer model

High Energy Physics - Theory 2017-08-10 v2 Strongly Correlated Electrons High Energy Physics - Lattice Mathematical Physics Algebraic Geometry math.MP

Abstract

We present a geometrical approach for studying dimers. We introduce a connection for dimer problems on bipartite and non-bipartite graphs. In the bipartite case the connection is flat but has non-trivial Z2{\bf Z}_2 holonomy round certain curves. This holonomy has the universality property that it does not change as the number of vertices in the fundamental domain of the graph is increased. It is argued that the K-theory of the torus, with or without punctures, is the appropriate underlying invariant. In the non-bipartite case the connection has non-zero curvature as well as non-zero Chern number. The curvature does not require the introduction of a magnetic field. The phase diagram of these models is captured by what is known as an amoeba. We introduce a dimer model with negative edge weights that give rise to vortices. The amoebae for various models are studied with particular emphasis on the case of negative edge weights which corresponds to the presence of vortices. Vortices gives rise to new kinds of amoebae with certain singular structures which we investigate. On the amoeba of the vortex full hexagonal lattice we find the partition function corresponds to that of a massless Dirac doublet.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1612.06308,
  title  = {Dimer geometry, amoebae and a vortex dimer model},
  author = {Charles Nash and Denjoe O'Connor},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.06308},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

25 pages, 9 figures Latest version: some references added and typos removed

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:28:31.751Z