
TL;DR
This paper links renormalization group flow to wave function collapse and horizon formation in holography, showing how different phases of a quantum field theory correspond to distinct bulk geometries and critical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interpretation of RG flow as wave function collapse and connects phase transitions to horizon emergence in holographic duals.
Findings
Gapped phases correspond to smooth-ending geometries.
Gapless states exhibit long throats and divergent length scales.
Lifshitz geometry arises at non-zero chemical potential.
Abstract
We show that renormalization group(RG) flow can be viewed as a gradual wave function collapse, where a quantum state associated with the action of field theory evolves toward a final state that describes an IR fixed point. The process of collapse is described by the radial evolution in the dual holographic theory. If the theory is in the same phase as the assumed IR fixed point, the initial state is smoothly projected to the final state. If in a different phase, the initial state undergoes a phase transition which in turn gives rise to a horizon in the bulk geometry. We demonstrate the connection between critical behavior and horizon in an example, by deriving the bulk metrics that emerge in various phases of the U(N) vector model in the large N limit based on the holographic dual constructed from quantum RG. The gapped phase exhibits a geometry that smoothly ends at a finite proper…
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