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QCD at very high density
Roberto Casalbuoni Department of Physics and INFN - Florence Perugia, January 22-23, 2007
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Summary Introduction and basics in Superconductivity Effective theory
BCS theory Color Superconductivity: CFL and 2SC phases Effective theories and perturbative calculations LOFF phase Phenomenology
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Introduction Motivations Basics facts in superconductivity
Cooper pairs
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Motivations Important to explore the entire QCD phase diagram: Understanding of Hadrons QCD-vacuum Understanding of its modifications Extreme Conditions in the Universe: Neutron Stars, Big Bang QCD simplifies in extreme conditions: Study QCD when quarks and gluons are the relevant degrees of freedom
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Studying the QCD vacuum under different and extreme conditions may help our understanding
Neutron star Heavy ion collision Big Bang
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Free quarks R Asymptotic freedom: q When nB >> 1 fm-3
free quarks expected
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Free Fermi gas and BCS (high-density QCD) f(E) E
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Trivial theory ? High density means high pF pF
Typical scattering at momenta of order of pF pF No chiral breaking No confinement No generation of masses Trivial theory ?
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Grand potential unchanged:
Adding a particle to the Fermi surface Taking out a particle (creating a hole)
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In QCD attractive interaction (antitriplet channel)
For an arbitrary attractive interaction it is convenient to form pairs particle-particle or hole-hole (Cooper pairs) In matter SC only under particular conditions (phonon interaction should overcome the Coulomb force) In QCD attractive interaction (antitriplet channel) SC much more efficient in QCD
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Basics facts in superconductivity
1911 – Resistance experiments in mercury, lead and thin by Kamerlingh Onnes in Leiden: existence of a critical temperature Tc ~ K. Lower bound 105 ys. in decay time of sc currents. In a superconductor resistivity < ohm cm
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Surprising since from Maxwell, for E = 0, B frozen
1933 – Meissner and Ochsenfeld discover perfect diamagnetism. Exclusion of B except for a penetration depth of ~ 500 Angstrom. Surprising since from Maxwell, for E = 0, B frozen Destruction of superconductivity for H = Hc Empirically:
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1950 – Role of the phonons (Frolich)
1950 – Role of the phonons (Frolich). Isotope effect (Maxwell & Reynolds), M the isotopic mass of the material Discontinuity in the specific heat (Corak) Excitation energy ~ 1.5 Tc
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Implication is that there is a gap in the spectrum
Implication is that there is a gap in the spectrum. This was measured by Glover and Tinkham in 1956
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Two fluid models: phenomenological expressions for the free energy in the normal and in the superconducting state (Gorter and Casimir 1934) London & London theory, 1935: still a two-fluid models based on Newton equation + Maxwell
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1950 - Ginzburg-Landau theory
Ginzburg-Landau theory. In the context of Landau theory of second order transitions, valid only around Tc , not appreciated at that time. Recognized of paramount importance after BCS. Based on the construction of an effective theory (modern terms)
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Assume for the ground state:
Cooper pairs 1956 – Cooper proved that two fermions may form a bound state for an arbitrary attractive interaction in a simple model Only two particle interactions considered. Interactions with the sea neglected but from Fermi statistics Assume for the ground state: spin zero total momentum
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Cooper assumed that only interactions close to Fermi surface are relevant (see later)
cutoff: Summing over k:
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Defining the density of the states at the Fermi surface:
For a sphere:
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EB For most superconductors Very important: result not analytic in G
Weak coupling approximation: EB Very important: result not analytic in G Close to the Fermi surface
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Wave function maximum in momentum space close to
Paired electrons within EB from EF: Only d.o.f. close to EF relevant!!
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Assuming EB of the order of the critical temperature, 10 K and vF ~ 108 cm/s we get that the typical size of a Fermi Cooper is about 10-4 cm ~ 104 A. In the corresponding volume about 1011 electrons (one electron occupies roughly a volume of about (2 A)3 ). In ordinarity SC the attractive interaction is given by the electron-phonon interaction that in some case can overcome the Coulomb interaction
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Effective theory Field theory at the Fermi surface
The free fermion gas One-loop corrections
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Field theory at the Fermi surface
(Polchinski, TASI 1992, hep-th/ ) Renormalization group analysis a la Wilson How do fields behave scaling down the energies toward eF by a factor s<1? Scaling:
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Using the invariance under phase transformations, construction of the most general action for the effective degrees of freedom: particles and holes close to the Fermi surface (non-relativistic description) Expanding around eF:
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requiring the action S to be invariant
Scaling: requiring the action S to be invariant
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corresponding to a Cooper-like interaction
The result of the analysis is that all possible interaction terms are irrelevant (go to zero going toward the Fermi surface) except a marginal (independent on s) quartic interaction of the form: corresponding to a Cooper-like interaction
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s-1+4 Quartic s-4x1/2 sd ?? Scales as s1+d
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Scattering:
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irrelevant marginal s0 s-1
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Higher order interactions irrelevant
Free theory BUT check quantum corrections to the marginal interactions among the Cooper pairs
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The free fermion gas Eq. of motion: Propagator: Using:
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Fermi field decomposition
or: Fermi field decomposition
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The following representation holds:
with: The following representation holds: In fact, using
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The following property is useful:
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Closing in the upper plane we get
One-loop corrections Closing in the upper plane we get
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d, UV cutoff From RG equations:
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BCS instability Attractive, stronger for
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BCS theory A toy model BCS theory Functional approach
The critical temperature The relevance of gauge invariance
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A toy model Solution to BCS instability Formation of condensates Studied with variational methods, Schwinger-Dyson, CJT, etc.
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Idea of quasi-particles through a toy model (Hubbard toy-model)
2 Fermi oscillators: Trial wave function:
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Mean field theory assumes Hres = 0
Decompose: Mean field theory assumes Hres = 0
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From the expression for G:
Minimize w.r.t. q From the expression for G:
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Gap equation Is the fundamental state in the broken phase where the condensate G is formed
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In fact, via Bogolubov transformation
one gets: Energy of quasi-particles (created by A+1,2)
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BCS theory 1 2
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Bogolubov-Valatin transformation:
To bring H0 in canonical form we choose
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As for the Cooper case choose:
Gap equation As for the Cooper case choose:
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Kinetic energy Interaction term
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Pair condensation energy
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For a single Fermi oscillator
Fermi distribution
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Functional approach Fierzing (C = is2) Quantum theory
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Evaluating the saddle point:
Since y* appears already in c we are double-counting. Solution: integrate over the fermions with the “replica trick”: Evaluating the saddle point:
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At T not 0, introducing the Matsubara frequencies
and using
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By saddle point: Introducing the em interaction in S0 we see that Z is gauge invariant under Therefore also Seff must be gauge invariant and it will depend on the space-time derivatives of D through
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In fact, evaluating the diagrams (Gor’kov 1959):
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got the result (with a convenient renormalization of the fields):
charge of the pair This result gave full justification to the Landau treatment of superconductivity
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The critical temperature
By definition at Tc the gap vanishes. One can perform a GL expansion of the grand potential with extrema: a and b from the expansion of the gap equation up to normalization
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To get the normalization remember (in the weak coupling and relatively to the normal state):
Starting from the gap equation: Integrating over D and using the gap equation one finds: Rule to get the effective potential from the gap equation: Integrate the gap equation over D and multiply by 2/G
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Integrating over x and summing over n up to N
Expanding the gap equation in D: One gets: Integrating over x and summing over n up to N
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Requiring a(Tc) = 0 Also and, from the gap equation
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Origin of the attractive interaction
Coulomb force repulsive, need of an attractive interaction Electron-phonon interaction (Frolich 1950) Simple description: Jellium model (Pines et al. 1958): electrons + ions treated as a fluid. Interaction: may give attraction Coulomb interaction screened by electrons and ions
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The relevance of gauge invariance
(See Weinberg (1990)) In the BCS ground state: The U(1)em is broken since Qem(O) = - 2e. Introduce an order parameter F transforming as the operator O:
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r(x) is gauge invariant, whereas
As usual the phase of O is the Goldstone field associated to the breaking of the global U(1). Decompose: Goldstone Order parameter r(x) is gauge invariant, whereas f dependence through U(1) broken to Z2
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Gauge invariant Fermi field
Effective theory in terms of From gauge invariance only combinations Eqs. of motion for f:
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Assume that Ls gives a stable state in absence of A and f
Assume that Ls gives a stable state in absence of A and f. This implies that is a local minimum and that Well inside the superconductor we will be at the minimum. The em field is a pure gauge and Meissner effect
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L3 = volume, l some typical length where the field is not a pure gauge
Close the minimum: L3 = volume, l some typical length where the field is not a pure gauge
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Cost of expelling B Convenience in expelling B if Since the current flows at the surface in a region of thickness l
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In stationary conditions the voltage V(x) = 0, with J not zero
Superconductivity Current density conjugated to f: Hamilton equation: In stationary conditions the voltage V(x) = 0, with J not zero
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and expand Ls for small F
Close to the phase transition the Goldstone field f is not the only long wave-length mode Consider again and expand Ls for small F
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Looking at the fluctuations:
Coherence length: Notice that in the SM:
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