Ground-state-energy universality of noninteracting fermionic systems
Abstract
When noninteracting fermions are confined in a D-dimensional region of volume O(LD) and subjected to a continuous (or piecewise continuous) potential V which decays sufficiently fast with distance, in the thermodynamic limit, the ground state energy of the system does not depend on V. Here, we discuss this theorem from several perspectives and derive a proof for radially symmetric potentials valid in D dimensions. We find that this universality property holds under a quite mild condition on V, with or without bounded states, and extends to thermal states. Moreover, it leads to an interesting analogy between Anderson's orthogonality catastrophe and first-order quantum phase transitions.
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