About: Scaling dimension is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1115 publications have been published within this topic receiving 36150 citations. The topic is also known as: anomalous scaling dimension & dimension.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use scalar-field perturbation theory as a laboratory to study broken scale invariance and find that scaling laws have unusual anomalies whose presence might have been guessed from renormalization-group arguments.
Abstract: We use scalar-field perturbation theory as a laboratory to study broken scale invariance. We pay particular attention to scaling laws (Ward identities for the scale current) and find that they have unusual anomalies whose presence might have been guessed from renormalization-group arguments. The scaling laws also appear to provide a relatively simple way of computing the renormalized amplitudes of the theory, which sidesteps the overlapping-divergence problem.
TL;DR: In this article, the spin-spin correlation functions for the two-dimensional Ising model on a square lattice in zero magnetic field for T>Tc and T
Abstract: We compute exactly the spin-spin correlation functions 〈σ0,0σM,N〉 for the two-dimensional Ising model on a square lattice in zero magnetic field for T>Tc and T
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the holographic properties of networks of random tensors and find that the entanglement entropy of all boundary regions, whether connected or not, obey the Ryu-Takayanagi entropy formula.
Abstract: Tensor networks provide a natural framework for exploring holographic duality because they obey entanglement area laws. They have been used to construct explicit toy models realizing many of the interesting structural features of the AdS/CFT correspondence, including the non-uniqueness of bulk operator reconstruction in the boundary theory. In this article, we explore the holographic properties of networks of random tensors. We find that our models naturally incorporate many features that are analogous to those of the AdS/CFT correspondence. When the bond dimension of the tensors is large, we show that the entanglement entropy of all boundary regions, whether connected or not, obey the Ryu-Takayanagi entropy formula, a fact closely related to known properties of the multipartite entanglement of assistance. We also discuss the behavior of Renyi entropies in our models and contrast it with AdS/CFT. Moreover, we find that each boundary region faithfully encodes the physics of the entire bulk entanglement wedge, i.e., the bulk region enclosed by the boundary region and the minimal surface. Our method is to interpret the average over random tensors as the partition function of a classical ferromagnetic Ising model, so that the minimal surfaces of Ryu-Takayanagi appear as domain walls. Upon including the analog of a bulk field, we find that our model reproduces the expected corrections to the Ryu-Takayanagi formula: the bulk minimal surface is displaced and the entropy is augmented by the entanglement of the bulk field. Increasing the entanglement of the bulk field ultimately changes the minimal surface behavior topologically, in a way similar to the effect of creating a black hole. Extrapolating bulk correlation functions to the boundary permits the calculation of the scaling dimensions of boundary operators, which exhibit a large gap between a small number of low-dimension operators and the rest. While we are primarily motivated by the AdS/CFT duality, the main results of the article define a more general form of bulk-boundary correspondence which could be useful for extending holography to other spacetimes.
TL;DR: In this paper, the improvement part of the action, computed explicitly to one-loop order, is brought into manifestly O(N) invariant form by using linear identities among dimension-four operators, which follow from the field equations of the unimproved action.