Statistics of energy levels and eigenfunctions in disordered systems
Alexander D. Mirlin

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent theoretical advances in understanding the fluctuations and correlations of energy levels and eigenfunctions in disordered mesoscopic systems, highlighting deviations from universal behavior and effects near the Anderson transition.
Contribution
It extends the supermatrix sigma-model approach beyond the zero-mode approximation to study system-specific deviations and critical phenomena in disordered systems.
Findings
Universal RMT results are reproduced in zero-mode approximation.
Deviations from universality are linked to classical diffusive dynamics.
Strong deviations occur near the Anderson transition, with multifractal wave functions.
Abstract
The article reviews recent developments in the theory of fluctuations and correlations of energy levels and eigenfunction amplitudes in diffusive mesoscopic samples. Various spatial geometries are considered, with emphasis on low-dimensional (quasi-1D and 2D) systems. Calculations are based on the supermatrix sigma-model approach. The method reproduces, in so-called zero-mode approximation, the universal random matrix theory (RMT) results for the energy-level and eigenfunction fluctuations. Going beyond this approximation allows us to study system-specific deviations from universality, which are determined by the diffusive classical dynamics in the system. These deviations are especially strong in the far ``tails'' of the distribution function of the eigenfunction amplitudes (as well as of some related quantities, such as local density of states, relaxation time, etc.). These asymptotic…
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