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Conformal field theory for inhomogeneous one-dimensional quantum systems: the example of non-interacting Fermi gases

Jérôme DubailFrench National Centre for Scientific ResearchJean-Marie StéphanClaude Bernard University Lyon 1Jacopo VitiInstituto Internacional de FisicaPasquale CalabreseIstituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare Sezione di Bologna
SciPost Physicsjournal2017en
ABI

Abstract

Conformal field theory (CFT) has been extremely successful in describing large-scale universal effects in one-dimensional (1D) systems at quantum critical points. Unfortunately, its applicability in condensed matter physics has been limited to situations in which the bulk is uniform because CFT describes low-energy excitations around some energy scale, taken to be constant throughout the system. However, in many experimental contexts, such as quantum gases in trapping potentials and in several out-of-equilibrium situations, systems are strongly inhomogeneous. We show here that the powerful CFT methods can be extended to deal with such 1D situations, providing a few concrete examples for non-interacting Fermi gases. The system's inhomogeneity enters the field theory action through parameters that vary with position; in particular, the metric itself varies, resulting in a CFT in curved space. This approach allows us to derive exact formulas for entanglement entropies which were not known by other means.

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