Universal and non-universal facets of quantum critical phenomena unveiled along the Schmidt decomposition theorem
Abstract
Critical phenomena have been extensively investigated both theoretically and experimentally in many fields, such as condensed matter physics, biology, e.g., brain criticality, and cosmology. In particular, the behaviour of response functions right at critical points (CPs) is highly topical. It turns out that in the frame of Boltzmann-Gibbs-von Neumann-Shannon approach, the extensive character of entropy breaks down at CPs. The latter implies diverging susceptibilities, which is at odds with experimental observations. Here, we investigate the influence of the spin magnitude S on the quantum Gr\"uneisen parameter 0Kq right at CPs for the 1D Ising model under a transverse magnetic field. Our findings are fourfold: i) for higher S, 0Kq is increased, but remains finite, reflecting the enhancement of the Hilbert space dimensionality; ii) the Schmidt decomposition theorem recovers the extensivity of the nonadditive q-entropy Sq only for a special value of the entropic index q; iii) the universality class in the frame of Sq depends only on the symmetry of the system; iv) we propose an experimental setup to explore finite-size effects in connection with the Hilbert space occupation at CPs. Our findings unveil both universal and non-universal aspects of quantum criticality in terms of 0Kq and Sq.
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