Quantum phase transitions in the interacting boson model
Pavel Cejnar, Jan Jolie

TL;DR
This review discusses quantum phase transitions in the Interacting Boson Model, highlighting shape changes in nuclei, finite-size effects, and the model's role in understanding many-body quantum systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of QPTs in IBM, including new insights into phase coexistence, dynamical symmetries, and extensions of the model for nuclear structure analysis.
Findings
Finite-size precursors of shape-phase transitions verified in nuclei
Diverse dynamical symmetries characterize competing quantum phases
QPT-like behavior observed in excited states
Abstract
This review is focused on various properties of quantum phase transitions (QPTs) in the Interacting Boson Model (IBM) of nuclear structure. The model in its infinite-size limit exhibits shape-phase transitions between spherical, deformed prolate, and deformed oblate forms of the ground state. Finite-size precursors of such behavior are verified by robust variations of nuclear properties (nuclear masses, excitation energies, transition probabilities for low lying levels) across the chart of nuclides. Simultaneously, the model serves as a theoretical laboratory for studying diverse general features of QPTs in interacting many-body systems, which differ in many respects from lattice models of solid-state physics. We outline the most important fields of the present interest: (a) The coexistence of first- and second-order phase transitions supports studies related to the microscopic origin…
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