Quantum field theory in a magnetic field: From quantum chromodynamics to graphene and Dirac semimetals
Vladimir A. Miransky, Igor A. Shovkovy

TL;DR
This review explores how external magnetic fields influence quantum field phenomena across high-energy physics and condensed matter, highlighting magnetic catalysis, chiral effects, and applications to graphene and Dirac semimetals.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of magnetic catalysis and related phenomena, extending theoretical concepts to condensed matter systems like graphene and Dirac semimetals.
Findings
Magnetic catalysis induces spontaneous symmetry breaking in relativistic fermions.
Chiral magnetic and separation effects have significant phenomenological implications.
Magnetic fields influence quantum Hall effects and properties of Dirac semimetals.
Abstract
A range of quantum field theoretical phenomena driven by external magnetic fields and their applications in relativistic systems and quasirelativistic condensed matter ones, such as graphene and Dirac/Weyl semimetals, are reviewed. We start by introducing the underlying physics of the magnetic catalysis. The dimensional reduction of the low-energy dynamics of relativistic fermions in an external magnetic field is explained and its role in catalyzing spontaneous symmetry breaking is emphasized. The general theoretical consideration is supplemented by the analysis of the magnetic catalysis in quantum electrodynamics, chromodynamics and quasirelativistic models relevant for condensed matter physics. By generalizing the ideas of the magnetic catalysis to the case of nonzero density and temperature, we argue that other interesting phenomena take place. The chiral magnetic and chiral…
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