Low-Energy Effective Theory at a Quantum Critical Point of the Two-Dimensional Hubbard Model: Mean-Field Analysis
Kambis Veschgini, Manfred Salmhofer

TL;DR
This paper investigates the quantum critical point of the 2D Hubbard model near Van Hove filling using mean-field and bosonic effective theories, revealing how singular self-energy effects influence phase transitions and quasiparticle properties.
Contribution
It introduces a bosonic formulation of the effective action at the QCP, incorporating order parameter fluctuations and analyzing their impact on phase transitions in the Hubbard model.
Findings
Singular fermionic self-energy suppresses gap formation in superconducting and magnetic channels.
Effective density-density interactions are peaked at nonzero frequency, affecting quasiparticle lifetime.
Mean-field analysis shows rounding of first-order transitions to quantum phase transitions due to self-energy effects.
Abstract
We complement previous functional renormalization group (fRG) studies of the two-dimensional Hubbard model by mean-field calculations. The focus falls on Van Hove filling and the the hopping amplitude t'/t=0.341. The fRG data suggest a quantum critical point (QCP) in this region and in its vicinity a singular fermionic self-energy, Im with . Here we start a more detailed investigation of this QCP using a bosonic formulation for the effective action, where the bosons couple to the order parameter fields. To this end, we use the channel decomposition of the fermionic effective action developed in [Phys. Rev. B 79, 195125 (2009)], which allows to perform Hubbard-Stratonovich transformations for all relevant order parameter fields at any given energy scale. We stop the flow at a scale where the correlations of the order…
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