J. M. P. Carmelo, Stellan Östlund, and M. J. Sampaio
The Hubbard model on a bipartite lattice is one of the most 
studied many- particle quantum problems. However, except 
in one dimension the model has no exact solution and there 
remain many open questions about its properties. Here we 
report a recent exact result [1]. According to it, for on-site 
interaction U 6= 0 the local SU(2) × SU(2) × U(1) gauge 
symmetry of the Hubbard model on a bipartite lattice with 
vanishing transfer integral t = 0 studied in [2] can be lifted 
to a global [SU(2)× SU(2)× U(1)]/Z2 2 = SO(3) ×SO(3) 
×U(1) symmetry in the presence of the kinetic-energy 
hopping term of the Hamiltonian with t > 0. The generator 
of the new found hidden independent charge global U(1) 
symmetry, which is not related to the ordinary U(1) gauge 
subgroup of electromagnetism, is one half the rotated-
electron number of singly-occupied sites operator. Although 
addition of chemicalpotential and magnetic-field operator 
terms to the model Hamiltonian lowers its symmetry, such 
terms commute with it. Therefore, its energy eigenstates 
refer to representations of the new found global SO(3) × 
SO(3) × U(1) = [SO(4) × U(1)]/Z2 symmetry, which is 
expected to have important physical consequences. Our 
studies reveal that for U/4t > 0 the model charge and spin 
degrees of freedom are associated with U(2) = SU(2) × 
U(1) and SU(2) symmetries [1], respectively, rather than 
with two SU(2) symmetries. (The latter case would hold if 
the model global symmetry was only SO(4) = [SU(2)
×SU(2)]/Z2.) The occurrence of such charge U(2) = SU(2) 
× U(1) symmetry and spin SU(2) symmetry is for the 
onedimensional model behind the different ABCDF and 
ABCD forms of the charge and spin monodromy matrices, 
respectively, found by the inverse scattering method exact 
solution [3].
 
1. J.M.P. Carmelo, Stellan Östlund, and M.J. Sampaio, 
Ann.Phys. 325, 1550 (2010).
2. Stellan Östlund and Eugene Mele, Phys.Rev. B 44, 12413 
(1991).
3. M.J. Martins and P.B. Ramos, Nucl.Phys. B 522, 413 
(1998).
    
            
            
            
                
        Speaker:
        
    Jose Carmelo
        
            (Department of Physics, University of Minho)