Traditionally Fermi surfaces for problems in d spatial dimensions have
dimensionality d−1, i.e., codimension dc=1 along which energy varies.
Situations with dc>1 arise when the gapless fermionic excitations live at
isolated nodal points or lines. For dc>1 weak short range interactions are
irrelevant at the non-interacting fixed point. Increasing interaction strength
can lead to phase transitions out of this Fermi liquid. We illustrate this by
studying the transition to superconductivity in a controlled ϵ
expansion near dc=1. The resulting non-trivial fixed point is shown to
describe a scale invariant theory that lives in effective space-time dimension
D=dc+1. Remarkably, the results can be reproduced by the more familiar
Hertz-Millis action for the bosonic superconducting order parameter even though
it lives in different space-time dimensions.Comment: 4 page