Uncomputably Complex Renormalisation Group Flows
James D. Watson, Emilio Onorati, Toby S. Cubitt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that certain quantum many-body systems exhibit uncomputable renormalisation group flows, revealing a new form of unpredictability that surpasses chaos, with trajectories that can remain close for uncomputable durations before diverging.
Contribution
The work constructs a rigorous example of an uncomputable RG flow in a quantum many-body system, showing that such flows can be fundamentally unpredictable and unapproximable.
Findings
Uncomputable RG flows can remain arbitrarily close for uncomputable times.
Trajectories can abruptly diverge to different phases.
The RG map steps are computable, but the overall flow is uncomputable.
Abstract
Renormalisation group (RG) methods provide one of the most important techniques for analysing the physics of many-body systems, both analytically and numerically. By iterating an RG map, which "course-grains" the description of a many-body system and generates a flow in the parameter space, physical properties of interest can be extracted even for complex models. RG analysis also provides an explanation of physical phenomena such as universality. Many systems exhibit simple RG flows, but more complicated -- even chaotic -- behaviour is also known. Nonetheless, the structure of such RG flows can still be analysed, elucidating the physics of the system, even if specific trajectories may be highly sensitive to the initial point. In contrast, recent work has shown that important physical properties of quantum many-body systems, such as its spectral gap and phase diagram, can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Theoretical and Computational Physics · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
