Memory-Dominated Quantum Criticality as a Universal Route to High-Temperature Superconductivity
Byung Gyu Chae

TL;DR
This paper proposes that memory-dominated quantum criticality, characterized by a specific relaxation-rate spectrum, universally facilitates high-temperature superconductivity through long-time collective modes.
Contribution
It derives a universal spectral representation of the Cooper-channel kernel from microscopic theory, linking relaxation spectra to superconducting instability without specific mediators.
Findings
Memory-dominated regime with $K(t) \\sim 1/t$ leads to logarithmic enhancement of pairing.
Infrared spectral weight sets the exponential transition scale for superconductivity.
Infrared-singular spectra produce power-law responses and algebraic transition scale enhancement.
Abstract
Understanding the dynamical origin of high-temperature superconductivity remains a central challenge in strongly correlated quantum matter. Near quantum criticality, diverging correlation times reorganize the infrared dynamics into a scale-free continuum of collective relaxation processes. We show that the infrared behavior of interacting electrons is generically controlled by the relaxation-rate spectrum of the underlying many-body dynamics. Starting from a microscopic fermionic theory, we derive that the Cooper-channel kernel admits a universal spectral representation in terms of the time-scale density of states (TDOS) of collective decay modes, without invoking a specific bosonic mediator. The superconducting instability follows directly from the vanishing of the quadratic kernel via a standard ladder resummation and Thouless criterion, with the pairing interaction determined…
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