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Finding critical points using improved scaling Ansaetze

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 Added by Marco Roncaglia
 Publication date 2015
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Analyzing in detail the first corrections to the scaling hypothesis, we develop accelerated methods for the determination of critical points from finite size data. The output of these procedures are sequences of pseudo-critical points which rapidly converge towards the true critical points. In fact more rapidly than previously existing methods like the Phenomenological Renormalization Group approach. Our methods are valid in any spatial dimensionality and both for quantum or classical statistical systems. Having at disposal fast converging sequences, allows to draw conclusions on the basis of shorter system sizes, and can be extremely important in particularly hard cases like two-dimensional quantum systems with frustrations or when the sign problem occurs. We test the effectiveness of our methods both analytically on the basis of the one-dimensional XY model, and numerically at phase transitions occurring in non integrable spin models. In particular, we show how a new Homogeneity Condition Method is able to locate the onset of the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition making only use of ground-state quantities on relatively small systems.



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Critical phase transitions contain a variety of deep and universal physics, and are intimately tied to thermodynamic quantities through scaling relations. Yet, these notions are challenged in the context of non-Hermiticity, where spatial or temporal divergences render the thermodynamic limit ill-defined. In this work, we show that a thermodynamic grand potential can still be defined in pseudo-Hermitian Hamiltonians, and can be used to characterize aspects of criticality unique to non-Hermitian systems. Using the non-Hermitian Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) model as a paradigmatic example, we demonstrate the fractional order of topological phase transitions in the complex energy plane. These fractional orders add up to the integer order expected of a Hermitian phase transition when the model is doubled and Hermitianized. More spectacularly, gap preserving highly degenerate critical points known as non-Bloch band collapses possess fractional order that are not constrained by conventional scaling relations, testimony to the emergent extra length scale from the skin mode accumulation. Our work showcases that a thermodynamic approach can prove fruitful in revealing unconventional properties of non-Hermitian critical points.
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