Quantum Geometry, Fractionalization, and Provability Hierarchy: A Unified Framework for Strongly Correlated Systems
Abstract
Mott physics - the interplay between itinerancy and localization of electrons - is undergoing a paradigm shift from the binary "bandwidth - filling" tuning framework to an intertwining of geometric, topological, and fractionalized degrees of freedom. Based on a series of breakthroughs in 2024 - 2025, this paper proposes five pioneering discoveries: (1) Prediction of the golden-ratio scaling of quantum metric fluctuations near the Mott critical point, supported by functional renormalization group...
Description / Details
Mott physics - the interplay between itinerancy and localization of electrons - is undergoing a paradigm shift from the binary "bandwidth - filling" tuning framework to an intertwining of geometric, topological, and fractionalized degrees of freedom. Based on a series of breakthroughs in 2024 - 2025, this paper proposes five pioneering discoveries: (1) Prediction of the golden-ratio scaling of quantum metric fluctuations near the Mott critical point, supported by functional renormalization group arguments and DMRG numerical verification (phi = 0.618 +/- 0.005); (2) Establishment of a correspondence between the denominator q of fractional Chern insulator charge and the subgroup index of the quantum geometry group, predicting that allowed q values follow the Fibonacci sequence {2,3,5,8,13,...} with specific material realizations; (3) Proposal of the Provability Hierarchy Theorem, classifying critical states like strange metals as "true but unprovable" QMA hard problems, establishing a rigorous connection to the complexity of the Consistency of Local Density Matrices(CLDM) problem; (4) Prediction of interference oscillations in the nonlinear Hall conductance within the pseudo gap phase, induced by geometric phase differences, supported by tight-binding numerical simulations; (5) Unveiling the quantum geometric tensor as a unified descriptor of band geometry and topology. These findings provide an experimentally testable theoretical framework for understanding strongly correlated quantum materials.
Source: arXiv:2604.12101v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.12101v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.12101v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.12101v1
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Apr 16, 2026
Physics
Physics
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