Microscopic analysis of the superconducting quantum critical point: Finite temperature crossovers in transport near a pair-breaking quantum phase transition
N. Shah, A. V. Lopatin

TL;DR
This paper provides a microscopic analysis of the superconducting quantum critical point near a pair-breaking transition, deriving finite temperature crossovers in conductivity and highlighting the role of quantum fluctuations across dimensions.
Contribution
It introduces a diagrammatic formalism that captures quantum fluctuations' effects on conductivity, extending beyond traditional Ginzburg-Landau approaches.
Findings
Quantum fluctuations inhibit conductivity at low temperatures.
Classical and intermediate regimes show positive bosonic contributions.
Non-monotonic behavior predicted when varying temperature or pair-breaking strength.
Abstract
A microscopic analysis of the superconducting quantum critical point realized via a pair-breaking quantum phase transition is presented. Finite temperature crossovers are derived for the electrical conductivity, which is a key probe of superconducting fluctuations. By using the diagrammatic formalism for disordered systems, we are able to incorporate the interplay between fluctuating Cooper pairs and electrons, that is outside the scope of a time-dependent Ginzburg Landau or effective bosonic action formalism. It is essential to go beyond the standard approximation in order to capture the zero temperature correction which results purely from the (dynamic) quantum fluctuations and dictates the behavior of the conductivity in an entire low temperature quantum regime. All dynamic contributions are of the same order and conspire to add up to a negative total, thereby inhibiting the…
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