Evidence of universal spectral collapse at a marginal dynamical regime
Udomsilp Pinsook, Pakin Tasee, Jakkapat Seeyangnok

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a universal spectral collapse in strongly correlated materials, revealing a marginal dynamical regime characterized by non-Markovian correlations, and provides a unified framework for interpreting ARPES spectra across diverse systems.
Contribution
It introduces a universal scaling function describing incoherent spectra arising from self-generated dynamical disorder, applicable across various strongly correlated materials.
Findings
Spectra collapse onto a single universal curve after rescaling.
The spectral form is described by a parabolic cylinder function with fixed order.
Incoherent spectra are governed by a marginal dynamical regime with non-Markovian correlations.
Abstract
Incoherent electronic states in strongly correlated materials are commonly attributed to disorder or material specific mechanisms. Here we show that incoherent spectra instead arise from self-generated dynamical disorder associated with competing fluctuations. In this regime, electron dynamics coupled to time-dependent scattering naturally produce a spectral function of the form rho (z) = exp(-z^2/4) Dnu (z), where z is a scaled energy and Dnu denotes the parabolic cylinder function. This form reflects a marginal dynamical regime characterized by non-Markovian temporal correlations. Applying this scaling function to angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) energy distribution curves from the cuprates Nd2-xCexCuO4 and Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+delta, the Kagome metal CsCr3Sb5, and the double-layer nickelate La3Ni2O7, we find that incoherent spectra are quantitatively described by rho (z),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Topological Materials and Phenomena
