170 research outputs found
Determinant Bounds and the Matsubara UV Problem of Many-Fermion Systems
It is known that perturbation theory converges in fermionic field theory at
weak coupling if the interaction and the covariance are summable and if certain
determinants arising in the expansion can be bounded efficiently, e.g. if the
covariance admits a Gram representation with a finite Gram constant. The
covariances of the standard many--fermion systems do not fall into this class
due to the slow decay of the covariance at large Matsubara frequency, giving
rise to a UV problem in the integration over degrees of freedom with Matsubara
frequencies larger than some Omega (usually the first step in a multiscale
analysis). We show that these covariances do not have Gram representations on
any separable Hilbert space. We then prove a general bound for determinants
associated to chronological products which is stronger than the usual Gram
bound and which applies to the many--fermion case. This allows us to prove
convergence of the first integration step in a rather easy way, for a
short--range interaction which can be arbitrarily strong, provided Omega is
chosen large enough. Moreover, we give - for the first time - nonperturbative
bounds on all scales for the case of scale decompositions of the propagator
which do not impose cutoffs on the Matsubara frequency.Comment: 29 pages LaTe
Self-energy flows in the two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard model
We study the two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard model by functional RG
methods, using our recently proposed channel decomposition of the interaction
vertex. The main technical advance of this work is that we calculate the full
Matsubara frequency dependence of the self-energy and the interaction vertex in
the whole frequency range without simplifying assumptions on its functional
form, and that the effects of the self-energy are fully taken into account in
the equations for the flow of the two-body vertex function. At Van Hove
filling, we find that the Fermi surface deformations remain small at fixed
particle density and have a minor impact on the structure of the interaction
vertex. The frequency dependence of the self-energy, however, turns out to be
important, especially at a transition from ferromagnetism to d-wave
superconductivity. We determine non-Fermi-liquid exponents at this transition
point.Comment: 48 pages, 18 figure
Clustering of fermionic truncated expectation values via functional integration
I give a simple proof that the correlation functions of many-fermion systems
have a convergent functional Grassmann integral representation, and use this
representation to show that the cumulants of fermionic quantum statistical
mechanics satisfy l^1-clustering estimates
Flow to strong coupling in the two-dimensional Hubbard model
We extend the analysis of the renormalization group flow in the
two-dimensional Hubbard model close to half-filling using the recently
developed temperature flow formalism. We investigate the interplay of d-density
wave and Fermi surface deformation tendencies with those towards d-wave pairing
and antiferromagnetism. For a ratio of next nearest to nearest neighbor
hoppings, t'/t=-0.25, and band fillings where the Fermi surface is inside the
Umklapp surface, only the d-pairing susceptibility diverges at low
temperatures. When the Fermi surface intersects the Umklapp surface close to
the saddle points, d-wave pairing, d-density wave, antiferromagnetic and, to a
weaker extent, d-wave Fermi surface deformation susceptibilities grow together
when the interactions flow to strong coupling. We interpret these findings as
indications for a non-trivial strongly coupled phase with short-ranged
superconducting and antiferromagnetic correlations, in close analogy with the
spin liquid ground state in the well-understood two-leg Hubbard ladder.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in European Physical Journal
Effective three-particle interactions in low-energy models for multiband systems
We discuss different approximations for effective low-energy interactions in
multi-band models for weakly correlated electrons. In the study of Fermi
surface instabilities of the conduction band(s), the standard approximation
consists only keeping those terms in the bare interactions that couple only to
the conduction band(s), while corrections due to virtual excitations into bands
away from the Fermi surface are typically neglected. Here, using a functional
renormalization group approach, we present an improved truncation for the
treatment of the effective interactions in the conduction band that keeps track
of the generated three-particle interactions (six-point term) and hence allows
one to include important aspects of these virtual interband excitations. Within
a simplified two-patch treatment of the conduction band, we demonstrate that
these corrections can have a rather strong effect in parts of the phase diagram
by changing the critical scales for various orderings and the phase boundaries.Comment: revised version, 16 pages, 13 figure
Superdiffusivity of asymmetric exclusion process in dimensions one and two
We prove that the diffusion coefficient for the asymmetric exclusion process
diverges at least as fast as in dimension and
in . The method applies to nearest and non-nearest neighbor asymmetric
exclusion processes
Efficient Parametrization of the Vertex Function, -Scheme, and the (t,t')-Hubbard Model at Van Hove Filling
We propose a new parametrization of the four-point vertex function in the
one-loop one-particle irreducible renormalization group (RG) scheme for
fermions. It is based on a decomposition of the effective two-fermion
interaction into fermion bilinears that interact via exchange bosons. The
numerical computation of the RG flow of the boson propagators reproduces the
leading weak coupling instabilities of the two-dimensional Hubbard model at Van
Hove filling, as they were previously obtained by a temperature RG flow.
Instead of regularizing with temperature, we here use a soft frequency
-regularization that likewise does not artificially suppress
ferromagnetism. Besides being more efficient than previous N-patch schemes,
this parametrization also reduces the ambiguities in introducing boson fields.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, references adde
Effective low-energy Hamiltonians for interacting nanostructures
We present a functional renormalization group (fRG) treatment of trigonal
graphene nanodiscs and composites thereof, modeled by finite-size Hubbard-like
Hamiltonians with honeycomb lattice structure. At half filling, the
noninteracting spectrum of these structures contains a certain number of
half-filled states at the Fermi level. For the case of trigonal nanodiscs,
including interactions between these degenerate states was argued to lead to a
large ground state spin with potential spintronics applications. Here we
perform a systematic fRG flow where the excited single-particle states are
integrated out with a decreasing energy cutoff, yielding a renormalized
low-energy Hamiltonian for the zero-energy states that includes effects of the
excited levels. The numerical implementation corroborates the results obtained
with a simpler Hartree-Fock treatment of the interaction effects within the
zero-energy states only. In particular, for trigonal nanodiscs the degeneracy
of the one-particle-states with zero-energy turns out to be very robust against
influences of the higher levels. As an explanation, we give a general argument
that within this fRG scheme the zero-energy degeneracy remains unsplit under
quite general conditions and for any size of the trigonal nanodisc. We
furthermore discuss the differences in the effective Hamiltonian and their
ground states of single nanodiscs and composite bow-tie-shaped systems.Comment: 13 page
- …