Signum-Gordon spectral mass from nonlinear Fourier mode mixing

Abstract

We investigate the emergence of a spectral mass in the signum-Gordon model, a nonlinear field theory characterized by a non-analytic, V-shaped potential where standard perturbative mass definitions are inapplicable. By analyzing the evolution of monochromatic wave trains, we identify two distinct dynamical regimes governed by the relationship between the wave's amplitude and its wavenumber. In the nonlinear regime, the model exhibits nonlinear Fourier mode mixing, where the potential's lack of analyticity acts as a source that populates higher-order harmonics. Using two complementary numerical methods -- tracking frequency distributions from initial wavenumbers and measuring spatial responses to boundary signals -- we construct comprehensive dispersion maps in energy-momentum space. Our results demonstrate that the signum-Gordon field effectively mimics a massive theory. Specifically, we show that a particular initial wave amplitude induces a spectral mass of unity, perfectly matching the behavior of the massive Klein-Gordon equation and providing a robust framework for quantifying mass in non-analytic scalar models.

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