Physical Review Research (Oct 2023)

Exact continuum representation of long-range interacting systems and emerging exotic phases in unconventional superconductors

  • Andreas A. Buchheit,
  • Torsten Keßler,
  • Peter K. Schuhmacher,
  • Benedikt Fauseweh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.5.043065
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
p. 043065

Abstract

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Continuum limits are a powerful tool in the study of many-body systems, yet their validity is often unclear when long-range interactions are present. In this paper, we rigorously address this issue and put forth an exact representation of long-range interacting lattices that separates the model into a term describing its continuous analog, the integral contribution, and a term that fully resolves the microstructure, the lattice contribution. For any system dimension, for any lattice, for any power-law interaction, and for linear, nonlinear, and multiatomic lattices, we show that the lattice contribution can be described by a differential operator based on the multidimensional generalization of the Riemann zeta function, namely, the Epstein zeta function. We employ our representation in Fourier space to solve the important problem of long-range interacting unconventional superconductors. We derive a generalized Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer gap equation and find emerging exotic phases in two-dimensional superconductors with topological phase transitions. Finally, we utilize nonequilibrium Higgs spectroscopy to analyze the impact of long-range interactions on the collective excitations of the condensate. We show that the interactions can be used to fine tune the Higgs mode's stability, ranging from exponential decay of the oscillation amplitude up to complete stabilization. By providing a unifying framework for long-range interactions on a lattice, both classical and quantum, our research can guide the search for exotic phases of matter across different fields.