Energy-level statistics in strongly disordered systems with power-law hopping
Paraj Titum, Victor L. Quito, Sergey V. Syzranov

TL;DR
This paper investigates the energy-level statistics of quasiparticles with power-law hopping in disordered systems, revealing how strong disorder influences correlations and spectral behavior, with implications for experimental measurements.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of energy-level correlations in strongly disordered systems with power-law hopping, including explicit formulas for different frequency regimes.
Findings
At small energy differences, correlations follow Wigner-Dyson statistics.
In the strong disorder limit, the correlation function exhibits specific frequency-dependent behavior.
The results suggest measurable effects in ac conductance experiments.
Abstract
Motivated by neutral excitations in disordered electronic materials and systems of trapped ultracold particles with long-range interactions, we study energy-level statistics of quasiparticles with the power-law hopping Hamiltonian in a strong random potential. In solid-state systems such quasiparticles, which are exemplified by neutral dipolar excitations, lead to long-range correlations of local observables and may dominate energy transport. Focussing on the excitations in disordered electronic systems, we compute the energy-level correlation function in a finite system in the limit of sufficiently strong disorder. At small energy differences the correlations exhibit Wigner-Dyson statistics. In particular, in the limit of very strong disorder the energy-level correlation function is given by for small…
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