83 research outputs found

    Time-dependence of correlation functions following a quantum quench

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    We show that the time-dependence of correlation functions in an extended quantum system in d dimensions, which is prepared in the ground state of some hamiltonian and then evolves without dissipation according to some other hamiltonian, may be extracted using methods of boundary critical phenomena in d+1 dimensions. For d=1 particularly powerful results are available using conformal field theory. These are checked against those available from solvable models. They may be explained in terms of a picture, valid more generally, whereby quasiparticles, entangled over regions of the order of the correlation length in the initial state, then propagate classically through the system.Comment: 4+ pages, Corrected Typo

    Field Theory of Branching and Annihilating Random Walks

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    We develop a systematic analytic approach to the problem of branching and annihilating random walks, equivalent to the diffusion-limited reaction processes 2A->0 and A->(m+1)A, where m>=1. Starting from the master equation, a field-theoretic representation of the problem is derived, and fluctuation effects are taken into account via diagrammatic and renormalization group methods. For d>2, the mean-field rate equation, which predicts an active phase as soon as the branching process is switched on, applies qualitatively for both even and odd m, but the behavior in lower dimensions is shown to be quite different for these two cases. For even m, and d~2, the active phase still appears immediately, but with non-trivial crossover exponents which we compute in an expansion in eps=2-d, and with logarithmic corrections in d=2. However, there exists a second critical dimension d_c'~4/3 below which a non-trivial inactive phase emerges, with asymptotic behavior characteristic of the pure annihilation process. This is confirmed by an exact calculation in d=1. The subsequent transition to the active phase, which represents a new non-trivial dynamic universality class, is then investigated within a truncated loop expansion. For odd m, we show that the fluctuations of the annihilation process are strong enough to create a non-trivial inactive phase for all d<=2. In this case, the transition to the active phase is in the directed percolation universality class.Comment: 39 pages, LaTex, 10 figures included as eps-files; submitted to J. Stat. Phys; slightly revised versio

    Morphogen Gradient from a Noisy Source

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    We investigate the effect of time-dependent noise on the shape of a morphogen gradient in a developing embryo. Perturbation theory is used to calculate the deviations from deterministic behavior in a simple reaction-diffusion model of robust gradient formation, and the results are confirmed by numerical simulation. It is shown that such deviations can disrupt robustness for sufficiently high noise levels, and the implications of these findings for more complex models of gradient-shaping pathways are discussed.Comment: Four pages, three figure

    Critical Exponents near a Random Fractal Boundary

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    The critical behaviour of correlation functions near a boundary is modified from that in the bulk. When the boundary is smooth this is known to be characterised by the surface scaling dimension \xt. We consider the case when the boundary is a random fractal, specifically a self-avoiding walk or the frontier of a Brownian walk, in two dimensions, and show that the boundary scaling behaviour of the correlation function is characterised by a set of multifractal boundary exponents, given exactly by conformal invariance arguments to be \lambda_n = 1/48 (\sqrt{1+24n\xt}+11)(\sqrt{1+24n\xt}-1). This result may be interpreted in terms of a scale-dependent distribution of opening angles α\alpha of the fractal boundary: on short distance scales these are sharply peaked around α=π/3\alpha=\pi/3. Similar arguments give the multifractal exponents for the case of coupling to a quenched random bulk geometry.Comment: 13 pages. Comments on relation to results in quenched random bulk added, and on relation to other recent work. Typos correcte

    Quantum and classical localisation and the Manhattan lattice

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    We consider a network model, embedded on the Manhattan lattice, of a quantum localisation problem belonging to symmetry class C. This arises in the context of quasiparticle dynamics in disordered spin-singlet superconductors which are invariant under spin rotations but not under time reversal. A mapping exists between problems belonging to this symmetry class and certain classical random walks which are self-avoiding and have attractive interactions; we exploit this equivalence, using a study of the classical random walks to gain information about the corresponding quantum problem. In a field-theoretic approach, we show that the interactions may flow to one of two possible strong coupling regimes separated by a transition: however, using Monte Carlo simulations we show that the walks are in fact always compact two-dimensional objects with a well-defined one-dimensional surface, indicating that the corresponding quantum system is localised.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure

    The Number of Incipient Spanning Clusters in Two-Dimensional Percolation

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    Using methods of conformal field theory, we conjecture an exact form for the probability that n distinct clusters span a large rectangle or open cylinder of aspect ratio k, in the limit when k is large.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 1 eps figure. Additional references and comparison with existing numerical results include

    Effect of Random Impurities on Fluctuation-Driven First Order Transitions

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    We analyse the effect of quenched uncorrelated randomness coupling to the local energy density of a model consisting of N coupled two-dimensional Ising models. For N>2 the pure model exhibits a fluctuation-driven first order transition, characterised by runaway renormalisation group behaviour. We show that the addition of weak randomness acts to stabilise these flows, in such a way that the trajectories ultimately flow back towards the pure decoupled Ising fixed point, with the usual critical exponents alpha=0, nu=1, apart from logarithmic corrections. We also show by examples that, in higher dimensions, such transitions may either become continuous or remain first order in the presence of randomness.Comment: 13 pp., LaTe

    Conformal Invariance, the Central Charge, and Universal Finite-Size Amplitudes at Criticality

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    We show that for conformally invariant two-dimensional systems, the amplitude of the finite-size corrections to the free energy of an infinitely long strip of width L at criticality is linearly related to the conformal anomaly number c, for various boundary conditions. The result is confirmed by renormalization-group arguments and numerical calculations. It is also related to the magnitude of the Casimir effect in an interacting one-dimensional field theory, and to the low-temperature specific heat in quantum chains

    Multiscale quantum criticality: Pomeranchuk instability in isotropic metals

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    As a paradigmatic example of multi-scale quantum criticality, we consider the Pomeranchuk instability of an isotropic Fermi liquid in two spatial dimensions, d=2. The corresponding Ginzburg-Landau theory for the quadrupolar fluctuations of the Fermi surface consists of two coupled modes, critical at the same point, and characterized by different dynamical exponents: one being ballistic with dynamical exponent z=2 and the other one is Landau-damped with z=3, thus giving rise to multiple dynamical scales. We find that at temperature T=0, the ballistic mode governs the low-energy structure of the theory as it possesses the smaller effective dimension d+z. Its self-interaction leads to logarithmic singularities, which we treat with the help of the renormalization group. At finite temperature, the coexistence of two different dynamical scales gives rise to a modified quantum-to-classical crossover. It extends over a parametrically large regime with intricate interactions of quantum and classical fluctuations leading to a universal T-dependence of the correlation length independent of the interaction amplitude. The multiple scales are also reflected in the phase diagram and in the critical thermodynamics. In particular, we find that the latter cannot be interpreted in terms of only a single dynamical exponent: whereas, e.g., the critical specific heat is determined by the z=3 mode, the critical compressibility is found to be dominated by the z=2 fluctuations.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; (v2) RG implementation with arbitrary dynamical exponent z, discussion on fixed-points adde

    Mean Area of Self-Avoiding Loops

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    The mean area of two-dimensional unpressurised vesicles, or self-avoiding loops of fixed length NN, behaves for large NN as A0N3/2A_0 N^{3/2}, while their mean square radius of gyration behaves as R02N3/2R^2_0 N^{3/2}. The amplitude ratio A0/R02A_0/R_0^2 is computed exactly and found to equal 4π/54\pi/5. The physics of the pressurised case, both in the inflated and collapsed phases, may be usefully related to that of a complex O(n) field theory coupled to a U(1) gauge field, in the limit n→0n \to 0.Comment: 12 pages, plain TeX, (one TeX macro omission corrected
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