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How Generic Scale Invariance Influences Quantum and Classical Phase Transitions

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TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss a paradigm that has become of increasing importance in the theory of quantum phase transitions, namely, the coupling of the order-parameter fluctuations to other soft modes and the resulting impossibility of constructing a simple Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson theory in terms of order parameter only.
Abstract
This review discusses a paradigm that has become of increasing importance in the theory of quantum phase transitions, namely, the coupling of the order-parameter fluctuations to other soft modes and the resulting impossibility of constructing a simple Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson theory in terms of the order parameter only. The soft modes in question are manifestations of generic scale invariance, i.e., the appearance of long-range order in whole regions in the phase diagram. The concept of generic scale invariance and its influence on critical behavior is explained using various examples, both classical and quantum mechanical. The peculiarities of quantum phase transitions are discussed, with emphasis on the fact that they are more susceptible to the effects of generic scale invariance than their classical counterparts. Explicit examples include the quantum ferromagnetic transition in metals, with or without quenched disorder; the metal-superconductor transition at zero temperature; and the quantum antiferromagnetic transition. Analogies with classical phase transitions in liquid crystals and classical fluids are pointed out, and a unifying conceptual framework is developed for all transitions that are influenced by generic scale invariance.

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Holographic Superconductors

TL;DR: In this paper, it has been shown that a gravitational dual to a superconductor can be obtained by coupling anti-de Sitter gravity to a Maxwell field and a charged scalar.
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Quantum criticality in heavy-fermion metals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize some of the basic issues, including the extent to which the quantum criticality in heavy-fermion metals goes beyond the standard theory of order-parameter fluctuations, the nature of the Kondo effect in the quantum-critical regime, the non-Fermi-liquid phenomena that accompany quantum criticalities and the interplay between quantum criticalness and unconventional superconductivity.
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Electrodynamics of correlated electron materials

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review studies of the electromagnetic response of various classes of correlated electron materials including transition metal oxides, organic and molecular conductors, intermetallic compounds with $d$- and $f$-electrons as well as magnetic semiconductors.
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Superconducting phases of f -electron compounds

TL;DR: The experimental status of the study of the superconducting phases of $f$-electron compounds is reviewed in this paper, where superconductivity has been found at the border of magnetic order as well as deep within ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetically ordered states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional renormalization group approach to correlated fermion systems

TL;DR: The functional renormalization group as discussed by the authors is a flexible and unbiased tool for dealing with scale-dependent behavior of correlated fermion systems, such as Luttinger liquid behavior and the Kondo effect.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental evidence of the Halperin-Lubensky-Ma effect in liquid crystals.

TL;DR: The orientational order parameter decrease, due to nematic director macroscopic fluctuations, is obtained by birefringence measurements around the nematic <--> smectic-A transition temperature of the liquid crystal 4'-n-octyl-4-cyanobiphenyl, providing direct evidence of the Halperin-Lubensky-Ma effect.
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Superconducting ``metals'' and ``insulators''

TL;DR: In this paper, a characterization of zero-temperature phases in disordered superconductors is proposed on the basis of the nature of quasiparticle transport. But the characterization is restricted to the case where the superconductor is destroyed at zero temperature to form a normal metal or a normal insulator.
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Two experimental tests of a fluctuation-induced first-order phase transition: intensity fluctuation microscopy at the nematic-smectic-A transition.

TL;DR: It is shown that the NA transition in 4'-n-octyl-4-cyanobiphenyl (8CB) is clearly first order, contrary to calorimetric studies but in agreement with conclusions drawn from front-velocity measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum critical behavior of itinerant ferromagnets

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that correlation effects in the underlying itinerant electron system lead to singularities in the order parameter field theory that result in an effective long-range interaction between the spin fluctuations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Griffiths-McCoy singularities in the random transverse-field Ising spin chain

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the paramagnetic phase of the Ising spin chain and study the dynamical properties by numerical methods and scaling considerations, and they show that in the Griffiths phase all the above quantities exhibit power-law singularities and the corresponding critical exponents, which vary with the distance from the critical point, can be related to the dynamic exponent z.
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