The large-charge expansion in nonrelativistic conformal field theories
Vito Pellizzani

TL;DR
This paper explores the large-charge expansion in nonrelativistic conformal field theories, revealing new universal features and advancing the understanding of critical phenomena in systems lacking relativistic symmetry.
Contribution
It introduces recent progress in applying large-charge expansion techniques to nonrelativistic CFTs, expanding their theoretical and practical understanding.
Findings
Large-charge expansion reveals universal features of NRCFTs
Energy levels in finite-density systems can be computed using effective field theory
Nonrelativistic large-charge dynamics are richer than relativistic cases
Abstract
Conformal field theories (CFTs) are associated with critical phenomena and phase transitions and also play an essential role in string theory. Solving a CFT is an extremely constrained problem due to conformal invariance -- the task essentially reduces to the computation of a set of numbers called the CFT data -- yet it remains highly nontrivial. In fact, CFTs usually are strongly coupled and thus require new tools that do not rely on perturbation theory. For these reasons, in the past few decades, they became one of the most active fields of research. A natural extension of these ideas with far-reaching implications for condensed matter systems -- in which relativistic effects are not manifest -- is to replace the Poincare group by the Galilean group, thereby opening the way to a precise formulation of a whole new class of critical phenomena in terms of nonrelativistic conformal field…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
