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arxiv: 2605.20160 · v1 · pith:4Y4PTI5Vnew · submitted 2026-05-19 · ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech

Towards a Matrix Product Ansatz in Two Dimensions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 03:04 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech
keywords matrix product ansatztwo dimensionsnon-equilibrium stochastic processesassisted exclusion modelhard-square lattice gasabsorbing phase transitionlattice gases
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The pith

A two-dimensional matrix product ansatz yields exact steady states for the non-conserved assisted exclusion model and maps it to the hard-square lattice gas.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper develops a generalization of the matrix product ansatz from one to two dimensions for constructing steady-state probabilities of lattice particle systems. It introduces the non-conserved assisted exclusion model, in which particles hop to a neighbor only if exactly one neighboring site is vacant and creation or annihilation occurs only at fully occupied sites. The ansatz supplies exact configuration weights that permit direct calculation of observables including density moments and currents. In the particle-conserving limit the model displays an absorbing transition at density one-half with exponent beta equal to three. The steady state is shown to coincide exactly with that of the hard-square lattice gas with nearest-neighbor exclusion, supplying a dynamical route to equilibrium states of constrained systems.

Core claim

We introduce the MPA formalism for two dimensions. As a concrete application, we introduce and exactly solve a non-conserved assisted exclusion model (NAEM) in one and two dimensions with constrained hopping and local birth-death dynamics: a particle can hop to a neighbouring site only when exactly one of its neighbouring sites is vacant, while creation and annihilation occur exclusively at sites whose neighbours are all occupied. The MPA yields exact steady-state weights and provides a systematic method to compute observables such as density moments and particle currents. In the particle-conserving limit, the system undergoes an absorbing phase transition at the critical density rho_c=1/2,0

What carries the argument

The two-dimensional matrix product ansatz, in which the probability weight of each lattice configuration is expressed as a product of matrices whose arrangement follows the two-dimensional geometry and whose algebraic relations close under the local update rules.

If this is right

  • Exact steady-state weights are obtained for the NAEM without further approximation.
  • Density moments and particle currents follow systematically from the matrix algebra.
  • The steady state maps exactly onto the hard-square lattice gas with nearest-neighbour exclusion.
  • An absorbing phase transition occurs at density 1/2 with order-parameter exponent beta equal to 3 in the conserving limit.
  • The mapping supplies a nonequilibrium dynamical route to equilibrium states of constrained lattice gases.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same matrix-product closure might be tested on other local update rules in two dimensions to identify which models admit exact solutions.
  • The equivalence suggests that certain equilibrium lattice gases can be realized as stationary states of driven stochastic dynamics.
  • Correlation functions computed from the ansatz could be compared with Monte Carlo simulations of the NAEM to confirm the mapping beyond the density.

Load-bearing premise

That a matrix-product form for the steady-state weights, generalized from the one-dimensional case, can be constructed and closed under the two-dimensional update rules of the NAEM without additional approximations or constraints.

What would settle it

Direct verification on small lattices that the proposed matrix-product weights satisfy the global balance condition (net probability flow into each configuration equals zero) for the NAEM master equation, or that measured densities and correlations reproduce those of the hard-square gas.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.20160 by Aikya Banerjee, Chandraniva Guha Ray, P. K. Mohanty.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Schematic representation of MPA in 2D. A M × L square lattice with periodic boundary condition, like (a), is composed of L rods of M-sites each, connected by interactions (dashed lines in (b)). Each of the j-th rod {n1j , n2j , . . . , nMj} is represented by a string of matrix direct product X1j⊗X2j⊗ . . . XMj of weight W| where Xij is a short-hand for Xsij . The matrix direct product string Q⊗ i Xij is wr… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Dynamics of the non-conserved assisted exclusion model (NAEM) in 2D. (a) Conserved: a particle with exactly one neighbouring site vacant, move there at rate r. (b) Non-conserved: a particle may be created or annihilated at rates p and q respectively, only at sites which have all its four neighbours occupied. 4. Example model: non-conserved assisted exclusion In order to illustrate a working example of a ma… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Steady-state dynamics of NAEM in 2D. In the steady state N00 = 0, and thus, neighbours of all vacant sites are occupied. The conserved part of the dynamics reduces to the following: Any (10) pair (in x and y direction) assisted by occupied neighbours can switch at rate r. C ∈ S to obtain a fully occupied configuration C ′′ with particle density ρ = 1. From this fully occupied state, any desired configurati… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: (a) ρ, ρ2 and ρ3 as a function of α, computed from Monte Carlo simulations of NAEM in 2D (symbols) on a 20 × 100 system are compared with Eq. (44). (b) ρ2 vs. ρ and ρ3 vs. ρ obtained following Eq. (46) (lines) matched well with the those obtained from simulations. Inset: for small α, ρ, ρ2 and ρ3 are linear in α as predicted by Eq. (47). 4.2. Exact results for small M = 2m In this section, we explicitly ca… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Density plots for M = 2m. Exact results (ρ versus α) for small M following Eq. (53) (solid lines), for (a) 4 × 100 and (b) 8 × 100 are compared with the same obtained from Monte-Carlo simulations (symbols). (c) Comparison of ρ versus α for different system size, M = 4, 6, 8 and 20. M = 20 is already in the large M limit. For M = 4 the transfer matrix is then T4 =   0 0 α 2 α 2 0 α 2 α 2 0 0 α 3 … view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: The currents: Log scale plot of Jx and Jy vs. α for (a) 6 × 100 system, (b) 12 × 100 system. For smaller systems, currents are asymmetric in x and y directions. For larger systems the asymmetry disappears and they exhibit α 3 behaviour near α = 0.. (c) Jx,y vs. ρ − ρc also shows a power-law near ρ = ρc = 1 2 . Symbols are data points obtained from Monte-Carlo simulations and solid lines are exact MPA solut… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Matrix product ansatz (MPA) is a powerful framework for constructing exact steady state weights of one dimensional non-equilibrium stochastic processes; but its generalization to higher dimensions is limited. Here, we introduce the MPA formalism for two dimensions (2D). As a concrete application, we introduce and exactly solve a non-conserved assisted exclusion model (NAEM) in one and two dimensions with constrained hopping and local birth-death dynamics: a particle can hop to a neighbouring site only when exactly one of its neighbouring sites is vacant, while creation and annihilation occur exclusively at sites whose neighbours are all occupied. The MPA yields exact steady-state weights and provides a systematic method to compute observables such as density moments and particle currents. In the particle-conserving limit, the system undergoes an absorbing phase transition at the critical density $\rho_c=\frac12$ with order-parameter exponent $\beta=3$. We further show that the steady state of the NAEM maps exactly onto the well-studied hard-square lattice gas with nearest-neighbour exclusion, thereby providing a nonequilibrium dynamical route to realizing equilibrium states of constrained lattice gases. Our work generalizes matrix-product methods beyond one dimension, establishing a systematic approach to exact solutions of interacting stochastic systems in 2D.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript introduces a two-dimensional generalization of the matrix product ansatz (MPA) for constructing exact steady-state weights of non-equilibrium lattice models. It defines the non-conserved assisted exclusion model (NAEM) with constrained hopping and local birth-death dynamics, claims an exact MPA solution in both 1D and 2D, demonstrates that the NAEM steady state maps exactly onto the hard-square lattice gas with nearest-neighbor exclusion, and reports an absorbing phase transition at critical density ρ_c = 1/2 with exponent β = 3 in the particle-conserving limit.

Significance. If the 2D MPA closure holds, the work would be significant for extending exact-solution techniques beyond one dimension and for supplying a dynamical realization of equilibrium constrained lattice gases. The explicit mapping to the independently studied hard-square model supplies external grounding and allows cross-checks of observables such as density moments and currents. The parameter-free character of the mapping and the systematic computation of moments are strengths that would remain valuable even if the 2D construction requires further elaboration.

major comments (2)
  1. [§4] §4 (2D MPA construction and closure): The central claim that the generalized matrix-product state remains an exact eigenvector of the full 2D master operator after every local update (assisted hop, birth, death) rests on an unproven cancellation of tensor contractions over overlapping plaquettes. The algebraic relations inherited from the 1D quadratic algebra are stated but not shown to factorize identically for 2D neighborhoods; without this explicit verification the exactness assertion for the 2D NAEM is not secured.
  2. [§5.2] §5.2 (phase-transition analysis): The reported order-parameter exponent β = 3 and the location ρ_c = 1/2 are obtained from the mapping to the hard-square gas, yet the manuscript does not demonstrate that the MPA-derived steady-state weights reproduce the known equilibrium critical behavior of that model to the required precision; a direct comparison of the MPA density moments against the hard-square series expansion would be needed to confirm consistency.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Figure 2] Figure 2: the schematic of the 2D tensor network is helpful but the bond indices and contraction order are not labeled, making it difficult to verify the claimed factorization.
  2. [Abstract] The abstract states that observables are computed 'systematically' from the MPA; a short explicit example (e.g., the expression for the current in terms of the matrices) should be added in the main text for reproducibility.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of the manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major comment in turn and indicate the changes that will be incorporated in the revised version.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§4] §4 (2D MPA construction and closure): The central claim that the generalized matrix-product state remains an exact eigenvector of the full 2D master operator after every local update (assisted hop, birth, death) rests on an unproven cancellation of tensor contractions over overlapping plaquettes. The algebraic relations inherited from the 1D quadratic algebra are stated but not shown to factorize identically for 2D neighborhoods; without this explicit verification the exactness assertion for the 2D NAEM is not secured.

    Authors: We agree that the manuscript would be strengthened by an explicit demonstration of the tensor cancellations on overlapping plaquettes. The algebraic relations are constructed so that the 1D quadratic algebra extends consistently to 2D, but we will add a dedicated appendix (or expanded subsection) that performs the explicit contraction for representative 2D neighborhoods, including assisted hops, birth, and death processes. This calculation will verify that all overlapping contributions cancel identically, thereby securing the exactness claim for the 2D case. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§5.2] §5.2 (phase-transition analysis): The reported order-parameter exponent β = 3 and the location ρ_c = 1/2 are obtained from the mapping to the hard-square gas, yet the manuscript does not demonstrate that the MPA-derived steady-state weights reproduce the known equilibrium critical behavior of that model to the required precision; a direct comparison of the MPA density moments against the hard-square series expansion would be needed to confirm consistency.

    Authors: Because the mapping between the NAEM steady-state weights and the hard-square lattice gas is exact and parameter-free, all moments and critical properties are identical by construction. Nevertheless, we accept that an explicit cross-check would be useful. In the revision we will add a short comparison of the first few density moments obtained from the MPA against the known low-density series expansions for the hard-square model, confirming numerical agreement up to the precision available from the series. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation grounded by external mapping

full rationale

The paper generalizes the 1D matrix-product ansatz to 2D and applies it to the NAEM, claiming exact steady-state weights via algebraic closure under local updates. The key result is an exact mapping of the NAEM steady state onto the independently studied hard-square lattice gas with nearest-neighbour exclusion. This external equivalence supplies non-circular grounding. No quoted step reduces a prediction or uniqueness claim to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain; the 2D closure is presented as a derived property rather than an input renamed as output. The construction remains self-contained against the external benchmark.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The work rests on the standard assumption that a steady state exists and satisfies the master equation, plus the domain assumption that a matrix-product representation can be found for the 2D process. No free parameters or new invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption A steady state exists and satisfies the master equation for the continuous-time Markov process defined by the hopping, birth, and death rules.
    Invoked implicitly when the MPA is used to obtain the steady-state weights.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5753 in / 1309 out tokens · 38492 ms · 2026-05-20T03:04:57.389137+00:00 · methodology

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