Quantum phase transition and absence of quadratic divergence in generalized quantum field theories
Hikaru Kawai, Kiyoharu Kawana, Kin-ya Oda, and Kei Yagyu

TL;DR
This paper proposes that in generalized quantum field theories, coupling constants are dynamically fixed at quantum phase transition points, potentially solving hierarchy problems and eliminating quadratic divergences.
Contribution
It introduces a framework where coupling constants are fixed at phase transition points, providing a new foundation for the multi-critical point principle and addressing the Higgs hierarchy problem.
Findings
Mass parameter is fixed at zero or ultraviolet cutoff.
Quadratic divergence is absent in a two-scalar model.
Quartic coupling can be fixed to a finite value.
Abstract
In ordinary thermodynamics, around first-order phase transitions, the intensive parameters such as temperature and pressure are automatically fixed to the phase transition point when one controls the extensive parameters such as total volume and total energy. From the microscopic point of view, the extensive parameters are more fundamental than the intensive parameters. Analogously, in conventional quantum field theory (QFT), coupling constants (including masses) in the path integral correspond to intensive parameters in the partition function of the canonical formulation. Therefore, it is natural to expect that in a more fundamental formulation of QFT, coupling constants are dynamically fixed a posteriori, just as the intensive parameter in the micro-canonical formulation. Here, we demonstrate that the automatic tuning of the coupling constants is realized at a quantum-phase-transition…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
