2D Coulomb Gases and the Renormalized Energy
Etienne Sandier, Sylvia Serfaty

TL;DR
This paper investigates the microscopic behavior of 2D Coulomb gases using the renormalized energy W, providing new asymptotic expansions, fluctuation estimates, and large deviations results, with implications for crystallization and lattice structures.
Contribution
It introduces a novel connection between Coulomb gases and the renormalized energy W, yielding detailed microscopic analysis and asymptotic results.
Findings
Asymptotic expansion of the partition function
Estimates on fluctuation probabilities at microscale
Large deviations principle for configurations exceeding W threshold
Abstract
We study the statistical mechanics of classical two-dimensional "Coulomb gases" with general potential and arbitrary \beta, the inverse of the temperature. Such ensembles also correspond to random matrix models in some particular cases. The formal limit case \beta=\infty corresponds to "weighted Fekete sets" and also falls within our analysis. It is known that in such a system points should be asymptotically distributed according to a macroscopic "equilibrium measure," and that a large deviations principle holds for this, as proven by Ben Arous and Zeitouni. By a suitable splitting of the Hamiltonian, we connect the problem to the "renormalized energy" W, a Coulombian interaction for points in the plane introduced in our prior work, which is expected to be a good way of measuring the disorder of an infinite configuration of points in the plane. By so doing, we are able to examine…
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