1 - Basic Concepts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
Summary
What Is a Quantum Phase Transition?
Consider a Hamiltonian, H(g), whose degrees of freedom reside on the sites of a lattice, and which varies as a function of a dimensionless coupling g. Let us follow the evolution of the ground state energy of H(g) as a function of g. For the case of a finite lattice, this ground state energy will generically be a smooth, analytic function of g. The main possibility of an exception comes from the case when g couples only to a conserved quantity (i.e., H(g) = H0 + gH1, where H0 and H1 commute). This means that H0 and H1 can be simultaneously diagonalized and so the eigenfunctions are independent of g even though the eigenvalues vary with g; then there can be a level-crossing where an excited level becomes the ground state at g = gc (say), creating a point of nonanalyticity of the ground state energy as a function of g (see Fig. 1.1). The possibilities for an infinite lattice are richer. An avoided level-crossing between the ground and an excited state in a finite lattice could become progressively sharper as the lattice size increases, leading to a nonanalyticity at g = gc in the infinite lattice limit. We shall identify any point of nonanalyticity in the ground state energy of the infinite lattice system as a quantum phase transition: The nonanalyticity could be either the limiting case of an avoided level-crossing or an actual level-crossing.
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- Quantum Phase Transitions , pp. 3 - 12Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000