Breakdown of the Migdal-Eliashberg theory and a theory of lattice-fermionic superfluidity
Emil A. Yuzbashyan, Boris L. Altshuler

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the breakdown of Migdal-Eliashberg theory at a critical electron-phonon coupling, revealing a new phase with broken translational symmetry and proposing a new lattice-fermionic superfluidity theory bridging weak and strong coupling regimes.
Contribution
It identifies the finite coupling threshold where Migdal-Eliashberg theory fails and introduces a new theory to describe the resulting phase and strong coupling phenomena.
Findings
Migdal-Eliashberg theory loses validity at λ ≈ 3.0-3.7.
A new phase emerges with broken translational symmetry beyond λ_c.
The new phase can be insulating or a Fermi liquid, with a gap or depression near the Fermi level.
Abstract
We show that the Migdal-Eliashberg theory loses validity at a finite value of the electron-phonon coupling regardless of the underlying model Hamiltonian. The value of is approximately between 3.0 and 3.7. The new phase that emerges at breaks the lattice translational symmetry. Depending on the filling fraction and crystal symmetry, it is an insulator or a Fermi liquid. Its characteristic feature is a gap or a pronounced depression of the fermionic density of states near the Fermi level. We establish the breakdown from within the Migdal-Eliashberg theory by demonstrating that the normal state specific heat is negative for and the quasiparticle lifetime vanishes in the strong coupling limit. At fixed , the transition to the new phase occurs at a critical temperature higher than the superconducting…
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