Interweaving Chiral Spirals
Toru Kojo, Yoshimasa Hidaka, Kenji Fukushima, Larry McLerran, Robert, D. Pisarski

TL;DR
This paper constructs and analyzes interweaving chiral spirals in (2+1) dimensions, exploring their formation, energy benefits, and phase transitions at high density using a non-local four-Fermi interaction model.
Contribution
It introduces a method to build multiple chiral spirals in 2+1 dimensions and estimates their energetic advantages and phase behavior at high density.
Findings
Optimal wedge angle scales as (lqcd/pF)^{3/5}
Energy gain scales as pF lqcd^2 at high density
Phase transitions occur with changing wedge number as pF increases
Abstract
We elaborate how to construct interweaving chiral spirals in (2+1) dimensions, defined as a superposition of chiral spirals oriented in different directions. We divide a two-dimensional Fermi sea into distinct wedges, characterized by the opening angle 2Theta and depth Q ~ pF, where pF is the Fermi momentum. In each wedge, the energy is lowered by forming a single chiral spiral. The optimal values for Theta and Q are chosen by balancing this gain in energy versus the cost of deforming the Fermi surface (which dominates at large Theta) and patch-patch interactions (dominant at small Theta). Using a non-local four-Fermi interaction model, we estimate the gain and cost in energy by expanding in terms of 1/Nc (where Nc is the number of colors), lqcd/Q, and Theta. Due to a form factor in our non-local model, at small 1/Nc the mass gap (chiral condensate) is large, and the interaction among…
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