Physics in non-fixed spatial dimensions via random networks
Ioannis Kleftogiannis, Ilias Amanatidis

TL;DR
This paper investigates the electronic properties of random networks lacking fixed spatial dimensions, revealing phenomena like localized states and spectral behaviors akin to known materials, and explores their implications for universal physics and emergent spacetime.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of quantum electronic properties in non-fixed dimensional networks, uncovering localized states and spectral features related to various quantum phases.
Findings
Localized states at specific energies, including E=-1,0,1
DOS transitions from unconventional spectra to Wigner semi-circle with increasing connectivity
Spatial dimension fluctuations correlate with electronic properties
Abstract
We study the quantum statistical electronic properties of random networks which inherently lack a fixed spatial dimension. We use tools like the density of states (DOS) and the inverse participation ratio(IPR) to uncover various phenomena, such as unconventional properties of the energy spectrum and persistent localized states(PLS) at various energies, corresponding to quantum phases with with zero-dimensional(0D) and one-dimensional(1D) order. For small ratio of edges over vertices in the network we find properties resembling graphene/honeycomb lattices, like a similar DOS containing a linear dispersion relation at the band center at energy E=0. In addition we find PLS at various energies including E=-1,0,1 and others, for example related to the golden ratio. At E=0 the PLS lie at disconnected vertices, due to partial bipartite symmetries of the random networks (0D order). At…
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