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03.05.2023 (Wednesday)

Adventures in Flatland: Quantum Criticality in the 2+1d Thirring Model

Regular Seminar Simon Hands (Liverpool)

at:
13:45 KCL
room K0.18
abstract:

The Thirring Model is a covariant quantum field theory of interacting fermions, sharing many features in common with effective theories of two-dimensional electronic systems with linear dispersion such as graphene. For a small number of flavors and sufficiently strong interactions the ground state may be disrupted by condensation of particle-hole pairs leading to a quantum critical point. With no small dimensionless parameters in play in this regime the Thirring model is plausibly the simplest theory of fermions requiring a numerical solution. I will review what is currently known focussing on recent simulations employing Domain Wall Fermions (a formulation drawn from state-of-the-art QCD simulation), to faithfully capture the underlying symmetries at the critical point, focussing on the symmetry-breaking transition, the critical flavor number, and the anomalous scaling of the propagating fermion.