Theory of finite temperature crossovers near quantum critical points close to, or above, their upper-critical dimension
Subir Sachdev (Yale University)

TL;DR
This paper develops a systematic method to compute finite temperature crossover functions near quantum critical points, especially above their upper-critical dimension, providing insights into different regions of the phase diagram and their critical behavior.
Contribution
It introduces an epsilon expansion approach for quantum critical systems near their upper-critical dimension, applicable to various models and capturing finite temperature effects.
Findings
Derived epsilon expansion for coupling constants near critical points.
Described the behavior of thermodynamic and dynamic observables at high temperatures.
Established the analyticity of observables as functions of the tuning parameter at finite temperature.
Abstract
A systematic method for the computation of finite temperature () crossover functions near quantum critical points close to, or above, their upper-critical dimension is devised. We describe the physics of the various regions in the and critical tuning parameter () plane. The quantum critical point is at , , and in many cases there is a line of finite temperature transitions at , with . For the relativistic, -component continuum quantum field theory (which describes lattice quantum rotor () and transverse field Ising () models) the upper critical dimension is , and for , is the control parameter over the entire phase diagram. In the region , we obtain an expansion for coupling constants which then are input as arguments of known {\em classical,…
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