Universal statistics of vortex lines
Adam Nahum, J. T. Chalker

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework using supersymmetric models to describe the universal statistical properties and phase transitions of vortex lines in disordered three-dimensional systems, linking them to known field theories.
Contribution
It introduces supersymmetric field theory mappings for vortex line statistics and phase transitions, providing a new interpretative framework for numerical results.
Findings
Vortex lines exhibit universal statistical properties on large scales.
The geometrical phase transition is described by the CP^{k|k} model.
Supersymmetric models relate vortex phenomena to known field theories.
Abstract
We study the vortex lines that are a feature of many random or disordered three-dimensional systems. These show universal statistical properties on long length scales, and geometrical phase transitions analogous to percolation transitions but in distinct universality classes. The field theories for these problems have not previously been identified, so that while many numerical studies have been performed, a framework for interpreting the results has been lacking. We provide such a framework with mappings to simple supersymmetric models. Our main focus is on vortices in short-range correlated complex fields, which show a geometrical phase transition that we argue is described by the CP^{k|k} model (essentially the CP^{n-1} model in the replica limit n\rightarrow 1). This can be seen by mapping a lattice version of the problem to a lattice gauge theory. A related field theory with a…
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