Intrinsic Instabilities in Fermi Glasses
Yat Fan Lau, Tai Kai Ng

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that weak, short-range interactions cause intrinsic instabilities in Fermi glasses, leading to magnetic moment formation and destabilizing the quasi-particle states, with implications across various dimensions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism for instability in Fermi glasses due to localized eigenstates, supported by analytical and numerical analysis, extending understanding of disordered electronic systems.
Findings
Localized eigenstates induce magnetic moments at the Fermi surface.
Numerical simulations confirm the instability mechanism.
The instability applies to both repulsive and attractive interactions.
Abstract
We study in this paper the effect of weak, short-ranged interaction on disordered metals. Through analysing the interaction matrix elements between different eigenstates of the non-interacting and corresponding Hartree-Fock single-particle Hamiltonian, we argue that as a result of localized single-particle eigenstates around the Fermi surface, the quasi-particle states on the Fermi surface are unstable towards formation of magnetic moments for arbitrary weak (but finite) repulsive interaction in the thermodynamic limit. This is a mechanism very different from the case of strong interaction ( bandwidth) or the quantum Griffiths effect where local moments are formed at small localized regions where coupling to the surrounding is weak. Numerical simulations are performed to verify our analysis. We further propose within a Landau Fermi-liquid-type framework that our result…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTheoretical and Computational Physics · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
