Impact of a Lifshitz Transition on the onset of spontaneous coherence (2401.03013v1)
Abstract: Lifshitz transitions are topological transitions of a Fermi surface, whose signatures typically appear in the conduction properties of a host metal. Here, we demonstrate, using an extended Falicov- Kimball model of a two-flavor fermion system, that a Lifshitz transition which occurs in the noninteracting limit impacts interaction-induced insulating phases, even though they do not host Fermi surfaces. For strong interactions we find a first order transition between states of different polarization This transition line ends in a very unusual quantum critical endpoint, whose presence is stabilized by the onset of inter-flavor coherence. We demonstrate that the surfaces of maximum coherence in these states reflect the distinct Fermi surface topologies of the states separated by the non-interacting Lifshitz transition. The phenomenon is shown to be independent of the band topologies involved. Experimental realizations of our results are discussed for both electronic and optical lattice systems.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.