Emergence of new laws with Functional Renormalization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Emergence of new laws with Functional Renormalization

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Title: Emergence of new laws with Functional Renormalization


1
Emergence of new laws withFunctional
Renormalization
2
(No Transcript)
3
different laws at different scales
  • fluctuations wash out many details of microscopic
    laws
  • new structures as bound states or collective
    phenomena emerge
  • elementary particles earth Universe
  • key problem in Physics !

4
scale dependent laws
  • scale dependent ( running or flowing ) couplings
  • flowing functions
  • flowing functionals

5
flowing action
Wikipedia
6
flowing action
microscopic law
macroscopic law
infinitely many couplings
7
effective theories
  • planets
  • fundamental microscopic law for matter in
    solar system
  • Schroedinger equation for many electrons and
    nucleons,
  • in gravitational potential of sun
  • with electromagnetic and gravitational
    interactions (strong and weak interactions
    neglected)

8
effective theory for planets
  • at long distances , large time scales
  • point-like planets , only mass of planets
    plays a role
  • effective theory Newtonian mechanics for point
    particles
  • loss of memory
  • new simple laws
  • only a few parameters masses of planets
  • determined by microscopic parameters history

9
QCD Short and long distance degrees of freedom
are different ! Short distances quarks
and gluons Long distances baryons and
mesons How to make the transition?
confinement/chiral symmetry breaking
10
functional renormalization
  • transition from microscopic to effective theory
    is made continuous
  • effective laws depend on scale k
  • flow in space of theories
  • flow from simplicity to complexity
  • if theory is simple for large k
  • or opposite , if theory gets simple for small k

11
Scales in strong interactions
simple complicated simple
12
flow of functions
13
Effective potential includes all fluctuations
14
Scalar field theory
15
Flow equation for average potential
16
Simple one loop structure nevertheless (almost)
exact
17
Infrared cutoff
18
Wave function renormalization and anomalous
dimension
  • for Zk (f,q2) flow equation is exact !

19
Scaling form of evolution equation
On r.h.s. neither the scale k nor the wave
function renormalization Z appear
explicitly. Scaling solution no dependence on
t corresponds to second order phase transition.
Tetradis
20
unified approach
  • choose N
  • choose d
  • choose initial form of potential
  • run !
  • ( quantitative results systematic derivative
    expansion in second order in derivatives )

21
unified description of scalar models for all d
and N
22
Flow of effective potential
  • Ising model

CO2
Critical exponents
Experiment
T 304.15 K p 73.8.bar ? 0.442 g cm-2
S.Seide
23
critical exponents , BMW approximation
Blaizot, Benitez , , Wschebor
24
Solution of partial differential equation
yields highly nontrivial non-perturbative
results despite the one loop structure
! Example Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition
25
Essential scaling d2,N2
  • Flow equation contains correctly the
    non-perturbative information !
  • (essential scaling usually described by vortices)

Von Gersdorff
26
Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition (d2,N2)
  • Correct description of phase with
  • Goldstone boson
  • ( infinite correlation length )
  • for TltTc

27
Temperature dependent anomalous dimension ?
?
T/Tc
28
Running renormalized d-wave superconducting order
parameter ? in doped Hubbard (-type ) model
TltTc
?
location of minimum of u
Tc
local disorder pseudo gap
TgtTc
- ln (k/?)
C.Krahl,
macroscopic scale 1 cm
29
Renormalized order parameter ? and gap in
electron propagator ?in doped Hubbard model
100 ? / t
?
jump
T/Tc
30
unification
abstract laws
quantum gravity grand
unification standard model
electro-magnetism gravity
Landau universal
functional theory critical physics
renormalization
complexity
31
flow of functionals
f(x) f f(x)
32
Exact renormalization group equation
33
some history ( the parents )
  • exact RG equations
  • Symanzik eq. , Wilson eq. , Wegner-Houghton
    eq. , Polchinski eq. ,
  • mathematical physics
  • 1PI RG for 1PI-four-point function and
    hierarchy
  • Weinberg
  • formal Legendre transform of Wilson
    eq.
  • Nicoll, Chang
  • non-perturbative flow
  • d3 sharp cutoff ,
  • no wave function renormalization or
    momentum dependence
  • Hasenfratz2

34
flow equations and composite degrees of freedom
35
Flowing quark interactions
U. Ellwanger, Nucl.Phys.B423(1994)137
36
Flowing four-quark vertex
emergence of mesons
37
BCS BEC crossover
BCS
BEC
interacting bosons
BCS
free bosons
Gorkov
Floerchinger, Scherer , Diehl, see also Diehl,
Floerchinger, Gies, Pawlowski,
38
changing degrees of freedom
39
Anti-ferromagnetic order in the Hubbard model
  • transition from
  • microscopic theory for fermions to macroscopic
    theory for bosons

T.Baier, E.Bick, C.Krahl, J.Mueller,
S.Friederich
40
Hubbard model
Functional integral formulation
next neighbor interaction
External parameters T temperature µ chemical
potential (doping )
U gt 0 repulsive local interaction
41
Fermion bilinears
Introduce sources for bilinears Functional
variation with respect to sources J yields
expectation values and correlation functions
42
Partial Bosonisation
  • collective bosonic variables for fermion
    bilinears
  • insert identity in functional integral
  • ( Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation )
  • replace four fermion interaction by equivalent
    bosonic interaction ( e.g. mass and Yukawa terms)
  • problem decomposition of fermion interaction
    into bilinears not unique ( Grassmann variables)

43
Partially bosonised functional integral
Bosonic integration is Gaussian or solve
bosonic field equation as functional of fermion
fields and reinsert into action
equivalent to fermionic functional integral if
44
more bosons
  • additional fields may be added formally
  • only mass term source term decoupled boson
  • introduction of boson fields not linked to
    Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation

45
fermion boson action
fermion kinetic term
boson quadratic term (classical propagator )
Yukawa coupling
46
source term
is now linear in the bosonic
fields effective action treats fermions and
composite bosons on equal footing !
47
Mean Field Theory (MFT)
Evaluate Gaussian fermionic integral in
background of bosonic field , e.g.
48
Mean field phase diagram
for two different choices of couplings same U !
Tc
Tc
µ
µ
49
Mean field ambiguity
Artefact of approximation cured by inclusion
of bosonic fluctuations J.Jaeckel,
Tc
Um U? U/2
U m U/3 ,U? 0
µ
mean field phase diagram
50
partial bosonisation and the mean field ambiguity
51
Bosonic fluctuations
boson loops
fermion loops
mean field theory
52
flowing bosonisation
  • adapt bosonisation to every scale k such that
  • is translated to bosonic interaction

k-dependent field redefinition
H.Gies ,
absorbs four-fermion coupling
53
flowing bosonisation
Evolution with k-dependent field variables
modified flow of couplings
Choose ak in order to absorb the four fermion
coupling in corresponding channel
54
Bosonisation cures mean field ambiguity
Tc
MFT
HF/SD
Flow eq.
U?/t
55
Flow equationfor theHubbard model
T.Baier , E.Bick , ,C.Krahl, J.Mueller,
S.Friederich
56
Below the critical temperature
Infinite-volume-correlation-length becomes larger
than sample size finite sample finite k
order remains effectively
U 3
antiferro- magnetic order parameter
Tc/t 0.115
temperature in units of t
57
Critical temperature
For TltTc ? remains positive for k/t gt 10-9
size of probe gt 1 cm
?
T/t0.05
T/t0.1
Tc0.115
-ln(k/t)
local disorder pseudo gap
SSB
58
Mermin-Wagner theorem ?
  • No spontaneous symmetry breaking
  • of continuous symmetry in d2 !
  • not valid in practice !

59
Pseudo-critical temperature Tpc
  • Limiting temperature at which bosonic mass term
    vanishes ( ? becomes nonvanishing )
  • It corresponds to a diverging four-fermion
    coupling
  • This is the critical temperature computed in
    MFT !
  • Pseudo-gap behavior below this temperature

60
Pseudocritical temperature
Tpc
MFT(HF)
Flow eq.
Tc
µ
61
Below the pseudocritical temperature
the reign of the goldstone bosons
effective nonlinear O(3) s - model
62
Critical temperature
T/t0.05
only Goldstone bosons matter !
?
T/t0.1
Tc0.115
local disorder pseudo gap
-ln(k/t)
SSB
63
critical behavior
for interval Tc lt T lt Tpc evolution as for
classical Heisenberg model cf.
Chakravarty,Halperin,Nelson
dimensionless coupling of non-linear sigma-model
g2 ? -1 two-loop beta function for g
64
effective theory
  • non-linear O(3)-sigma-model
  • asymptotic freedom
  • from fermionic microscopic law
  • to bosonic macroscopic law

65
transition to linear sigma-model
  • large coupling regime of non-linear sigma-model
  • small renormalized order parameter ?
  • transition to symmetric phase
  • again change of effective laws
  • linear sigma-model is simple ,
  • strongly coupled non-linear sigma-model is
    complicated

66
critical correlation length

c,ß slowly varying functions exponential
growth of correlation length compatible with
observation ! at Tc correlation length reaches
sample size !
67
conclusion
  • functional renormalization offers an efficient
    method for adding new relevant degrees of freedom
    or removing irrelevant degrees of freedom
  • continuous description of the emergence of new
    laws

68
Unification fromFunctional Renormalization
  • fluctuations in d0,1,2,3,...
  • linear and non-linear sigma models
  • vortices and perturbation theory
  • bosonic and fermionic models
  • relativistic and non-relativistic physics
  • classical and quantum statistics
  • non-universal and universal aspects
  • homogenous systems and local disorder
  • equilibrium and out of equilibrium

69
end
70
unificationfunctional integral / flow equation
  • simplicity of average action
  • explicit presence of scale
  • differentiating is easier than integrating

71
qualitative changes that make non-perturbative
physics accessible
  • ( 1 ) basic object is simple
  • average action classical action
  • generalized
    Landau theory
  • direct connection to thermodynamics
  • (coarse grained free energy )

72
qualitative changes that make non-perturbative
physics accessible
  • ( 2 ) Infrared scale k
  • instead of Ultraviolet cutoff ?
  • short distance memory not lost
  • no modes are integrated out , but only part of
    the fluctuations is included
  • simple one-loop form of flow
  • simple comparison with perturbation theory

73
infrared cutoff k
  • cutoff on momentum resolution
  • or frequency resolution
  • e.g. distance from pure anti-ferromagnetic
    momentum or from Fermi surface
  • intuitive interpretation of k by association with
    physical IR-cutoff , i.e. finite size of system
  • arbitrarily small momentum differences cannot
    be resolved !

74
qualitative changes that make non-perturbative
physics accessible
  • ( 3 ) only physics in small momentum range
    around k matters for the flow
  • ERGE regularization
  • simple implementation on lattice
  • artificial non-analyticities can be avoided

75
qualitative changes that make non-perturbative
physics accessible
  • ( 4 ) flexibility
  • change of fields
  • microscopic or composite variables
  • simple description of collective degrees of
    freedom and bound states
  • many possible choices of cutoffs
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