Effective Holographic Theories for low-temperature condensed matter systems
C. Charmousis (1,2), B. Gout\'eraux (1), B. S. Kim (3,4), E. Kiritsis, (4), Rene Meyer (4) ((1) LPT Orsay, Univ. Paris-Sud, (2) LMPT, Univ., Tours, (3) IESL-FORTH, Greece, (4) CCTP, Univ. of Crete)

TL;DR
This paper explores holographic models for condensed matter systems, analyzing their IR dynamics, thermodynamics, and conductivities, identifying regions with linear resistivity and Mott-like insulating behavior.
Contribution
It systematically characterizes the IR behavior of holographic theories with charge density and scalar operators, including their thermodynamics and transport properties, across a parameter space.
Findings
Certain parameter regions are excluded due to singularities.
Zero entropy at zero temperature except when m elta=
DC resistivity can be linear in temperature in specific regions.
Abstract
The IR dynamics of effective holographic theories capturing the interplay between charge density and the leading relevant scalar operator at strong coupling are analyzed. Such theories are parameterized by two real exponents that control the IR dynamics. By studying the thermodynamics, spectra and conductivities of several classes of charged dilatonic black hole solutions that include the charge density back reaction fully, the landscape of such theories in view of condensed matter applications is characterized. Several regions of the plane can be excluded as the extremal solutions have unacceptable singularities. The classical solutions have generically zero entropy at zero temperature, except when where the entropy at extremality is finite. The general scaling of DC resistivity with temperature at low temperature, and AC conductivity…
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