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Elementary objects of the 1D Hubbard model

Exotic elementary objects such as "holons" and "spinons", which are widely used in descriptions of correlated electrons in reduced spatial dimensions, were introduced from analysis of the excitation branches of one-dimensional (1D) models. The 1D Hubbard model with effective nearest-neighbor hopping integral t and on-site repulsion U is a prominent example. In the last twenty years a large number of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy experiments as well as electron energy-loss spectroscopic studies and high-resolution resonant inelastic X-ray experiments on several quasi-1D metals and quasi-1D Mott-Hubbard insulators have observed separate charge and spin spectral features, which have been identified with "holons" and "spinons". The elementary objects emerging within non-perturbative 1D correlated systems play now the same role in actual low-dimensional materials as Fermi-liquid quasiparticles in three-dimensional metals. The main goal of this paper is the review of representations of the 1D Hubbard model physics in terms of elementary objects whose configurations generate the energy eigenstates from the electron or hole vacuum. In addition, the relation to the holon and spinon representations is discussed and clarified.

preprint2013arXivOpen access
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