Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking in Quantum Systems: Emergence or Reduction?
N.P. Landsman

TL;DR
This paper examines how spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) in quantum systems, traditionally seen as an idealization only in infinite systems, can actually occur in large finite systems through sensitivity to perturbations, bridging the gap between theory and real materials.
Contribution
It demonstrates that SSB can be effectively realized in large finite quantum systems via perturbation sensitivity, reconciling formal theory with experimental observations.
Findings
Finite quantum systems exhibit SSB due to exponential sensitivity to perturbations.
The thermodynamic limit analogy explains the emergence of classical behavior from quantum systems.
Continuity between finite and infinite systems supports Earman's Principle in SSB context.
Abstract
Beginning with Anderson (1972), spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) in infinite quantum systems is often put forward as an example of (asymptotic) emergence in physics, since in theory no finite system should display it. Even the correspondence between theory and reality is at stake here, since numerous real materials show SSB in their ground states (or equilibrium states at low temperature), although they are finite. Thus against what is sometimes called `Earman's Principle', a genuine physical effect (viz. SSB) seems theoretically recovered only in some idealization (namely the thermodynamic limit), disappearing as soon as the the idealization is removed. We review the well-known arguments that (at first sight) no finite system can exhibit SSB, using the formalism of algebraic quantum theory in order to control the thermodynamic limit and unify the description of finite- and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy
