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    QUANTUM SCALING IN MANY-BODY SYSTEMS

    by Mucio A Continentino (Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil)

    This book on quantum phase transitions has been written by one of the pioneers in the application of scaling ideas to many-body systems — a new and exciting subject that has relevance to many areas of condensed matter and theoretical physics. One of the few books on the subject, it emphasizes strongly correlated electronic systems. Although dealing with complex problems in statistical mechanics, it does not lose sight of the experiments and the actual physical systems which motivate the theoretical work.

    The book starts by presenting the scaling theory of quantum critical phenomena. Critical exponents for different systems are calculated using both the momentum space and real space renormalization group approaches. The former is developed without the use of Feynman diagrams, allowing nonspecialists to fully appreciate the underlying physics of this method. The case of heavy fermions as an example of systems close to a zero temperature phase transition is presented and discussed in detail. This is also the case of non-Fermi liquid behavior associated with a quantum critical point. Metal–insulator transitions are discussed within the scaling approach. The book ends with a discussion on first order quantum phase transitions, in particular those which occur due to a fluctuation-induced mechanism.

     
    Contents:
    • Scaling Theory of Quantum Critical Phenomena
    • Landau and Gaussian Theories
    • Renormalization Group: The ε-Expansion
    • Quantum Phase Transitions
    • Real Space Renormalization Group Approach
    • Heavy Fermions
    • A Microscopic Model for Heavy Fermions
    • Metal–Insulator Transitions
    • Density-Driven Metal–Insulator Transitions
    • Mott Transitions
    • The Nonlinear Sigma Model
    • Fluctuation-Induced Quantum Phase Transitions
     
    Readership: Graduate students, lecturers and researchers in condensed matter physics.
     
    “The book is written clearly and can be useful for qualified physicists and mathematicians wishing to be familiar with the subject.”
    Mathematics Abstracts, 2002
     
    “… the author has been meticulous in presenting sufficient mathematical detail that a student with adequate training on Quantum and Statistical Mechanics can easily reproduce each derivation … The best passages are brief paragraphs, loaded with physical insight, which the reader must expand in his/her mind … the book is nonetheless very attractive … Continentino's writing is inspiring.”
    Brazilian Journal of Physics, Jun 2002
     
    204pp    Pub. date: Jan 2001  
    ISBN:   978-981-02-4389-0
    981-02-4389-8
       US$51 / £41

     


     

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