1,093 research outputs found
Order, disorder and phase transitions in quantum many body systems
In this paper, I give an overview of some selected results in quantum many
body theory, lying at the interface between mathematical quantum statistical
mechanics and condensed matter theory. In particular, I discuss some recent
results on the universality of transport coefficients in lattice models of
interacting electrons, with specific focus on the independence of the quantum
Hall conductivity from the electron-electron interaction. In this context, the
exchange of ideas between mathematical and theoretical physics proved
particularly fruitful, and helped in clarifying the role played by quantum
conservation laws (Ward Identities), together with the decay properties of the
Euclidean current-current correlation functions, on the
interaction-independence of the conductivity.Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures. These notes are based on a presentation given at
the Istituto Lombardo, Accademia di Scienze e Lettere, in Milano (Italy) on
May 5, 2016, as well as on the notes of a course given at the EMS-IAMP summer
school in mathematical physics `Universality, Scaling Limits and Effective
Theories', held in Roma (Italy) on July 11-15, 2016. Final version, accepted
for publicatio
The 2D Hubbard model on the honeycomb lattice
We consider the 2D Hubbard model on the honeycomb lattice, as a model for a
single layer graphene sheet in the presence of screened Coulomb interactions.
At half filling and weak enough coupling, we compute the free energy, the
ground state energy and we construct the correlation functions up to zero
temperature in terms of convergent series; analiticity is proved by making use
of constructive fermionic renormalization group methods. We show that the
interaction produces a modification of the Fermi velocity and of the wave
function renormalization without changing the asymptotic infrared properties of
the model with respect to the unperturbed non-interacting case; this rules out
the possibility of superconducting or magnetic instabilities in the ground
state. We also prove that the correlations verify a Ward Identity similar to
the one for massless Dirac fermions, up to asymptotically negligible
corrections and a renormalization of the charge velocity.Comment: 35 pages, 2 figure
The nematic phase of a system of long hard rods
We consider a two-dimensional lattice model for liquid crystals consisting of
long rods interacting via purely hard core interactions, with two allowed
orientations defined by the underlying lattice. We rigorously prove the
existence of a nematic phase, i.e., we show that at intermediate densities the
system exhibits orientational order, either horizontal or vertical, but no
positional order. The proof is based on a two-scales cluster expansion: we
first coarse grain the system on a scale comparable with the rods' length; then
we express the resulting effective theory as a contour's model, which can be
treated by Pirogov-Sinai methods.Comment: 36 pages, 4 figures; abstract changed, references added, comparison
with literature improved, figures adde
The ground state construction of bilayer graphene
We consider a model of half-filled bilayer graphene, in which the three
dominant Slonczewski-Weiss-McClure hopping parameters are retained, in the
presence of short range interactions. Under a smallness assumption on the
interaction strength as well as on the inter-layer hopping , we
construct the ground state in the thermodynamic limit, and prove its
analyticity in , uniformly in . The interacting Fermi surface is
degenerate, and consists of eight Fermi points, two of which are protected by
symmetries, while the locations of the other six are renormalized by the
interaction, and the effective dispersion relation at the Fermi points is
conical. The construction reveals the presence of different energy regimes,
where the effective behavior of correlation functions changes qualitatively.
The analysis of the crossover between regimes plays an important role in the
proof of analyticity and in the uniform control of the radius of convergence.
The proof is based on a rigorous implementation of fermionic renormalization
group methods, including determinant estimates for the renormalized expansion
Exact RG computation of the optical conductivity of graphene
The optical conductivity of a system of electrons on the honeycomb lattice
interacting through an electromagnetic field is computed by truncated exact
Renormalization Group (RG) methods. We find that the conductivity has the
universal value pi/2 times the conductivity quantum up to negligible
corrections vanishing as a power law in the limit of low frequencies.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; one reference updated, a few typos correcte
Ground state energy of the low density Hubbard model. An upper bound
We derive an upper bound on the ground state energy of the three-dimensional
(3D) repulsive Hubbard model on the cubic lattice agreeing in the low density
limit with the known asymptotic expression of the ground state energy of the
dilute Fermi gas in the continuum. As a corollary, we prove an old conjecture
on the low density behavior of the 3D Hubbard model, i.e., that the total spin
of the ground state vanishes as the density goes to zero.Comment: 13 pages; Version accepted for publication on the Journal of
Mathematical Physics; minor change
Columnar Phase in Quantum Dimer Models
The quantum dimer model, relevant for short-range resonant valence bond
physics, is rigorously shown to have long range order in a crystalline phase in
the attractive case at low temperature and not too large flipping term. This
term flips horizontal dimer pairs to vertical pairs (and vice versa) and is
responsible for the word `quantum' in the title. In addition to the dimers,
monomers are also allowed. The mathematical method used is `reflection
positivity'. The model and proof can easily be generalized to dimers or
plaquettes in 3-dimensions.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure. v3: typos correcte
Toward a multilevel representation of protein molecules: comparative approaches to the aggregation/folding propensity problem
This paper builds upon the fundamental work of Niwa et al. [34], which
provides the unique possibility to analyze the relative aggregation/folding
propensity of the elements of the entire Escherichia coli (E. coli) proteome in
a cell-free standardized microenvironment. The hardness of the problem comes
from the superposition between the driving forces of intra- and inter-molecule
interactions and it is mirrored by the evidences of shift from folding to
aggregation phenotypes by single-point mutations [10]. Here we apply several
state-of-the-art classification methods coming from the field of structural
pattern recognition, with the aim to compare different representations of the
same proteins gathered from the Niwa et al. data base; such representations
include sequences and labeled (contact) graphs enriched with chemico-physical
attributes. By this comparison, we are able to identify also some interesting
general properties of proteins. Notably, (i) we suggest a threshold around 250
residues discriminating "easily foldable" from "hardly foldable" molecules
consistent with other independent experiments, and (ii) we highlight the
relevance of contact graph spectra for folding behavior discrimination and
characterization of the E. coli solubility data. The soundness of the
experimental results presented in this paper is proved by the statistically
relevant relationships discovered among the chemico-physical description of
proteins and the developed cost matrix of substitution used in the various
discrimination systems.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, 46 reference
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