
Doug's presentation was his response to the recent article in Science magazine by Phil Anderson questioning the validity of a bosonic glue for the high temperature cuprate superconductors (Science 317, 1705 (2007)). Phil's contention is that the pairing is coming from the superexchange energy, J, which is in essence instantaneous in nature. As a consequence, he contends that a proper theory must be quite different from the strong coupling theories developed in the 1960s in regards to electron-phonon mediated pairing. The implication is that J is the "elephant", and that any dynamics causing bumps and wiggles in ARPES, tunneling, and optics spectra is the "mouse".
What Doug and his colleagues like Mark Jarrell have done is to use a dynamical cluster approximation to calculate the singlet pairing vertex in the Hubbard model for values of the Hubbard U ranging from 4t to 12t, where 8t is the bandwidth of the electronic states. This vertex, Gamma, can be thought of as a sum of an irreducible part, Lambda, plus induced interaction terms due to repeated scattering in the particle-hole channel. The latter can be divided into an S=0 and S=1 part. As the temperature is lowered, Gamma develops a momentum structure with a peak at q=(pi,pi), despite the fact that Lambda is structureless (the latter defines an effective U, denoted as U-bar). This behavior of Gamma is mirrored in the S=1 part of the induced interaction (the S=0 part is depressed around q=(pi,pi) instead), indicating that it is this term where the real action lies. They then write down a gap equation, and find out that the dominant eigenvalue displays the d-wave cos(kx)-cos(ky) behavior.
Now what about the dynamics? The pairing self-energy decays as a function of Matsubara frequency out to an energy scale of t, and this is mirrored by the frequency dependence of the dynamic spin susceptibility, chi. Equating the two, he finds that Gamma is equal to (3/2) (U-bar)^2 chi(q,omega), as expected for a spin fluctuation picture for the pairing. Therefore, Doug concludes that at the level of the Hubbard model, one can indeed think in terms of a pairing glue.
Next week, we will find out what Phil has to say about all of this.
Several questions were raised after Doug's talk.
Jorge Hirsch - What are the consequences? Doug - There will be structure in the ARPES and infrared conductivity that can be related to the frequency dependence of the normal and pairing self-energies.
Chandra Varma - Is this approach equivalent to RPA? Doug - Yes, except that the dynamic spin susceptibility is quantitatively different from what RPA gives.
Gabi Kotliar - What about analytic continuation, and how is this work related to my own? Doug - We have a lower Hubbard band, coherent structure near the Fermi energy, and an upper Hubbard band, as in your work.
Peter Hirschfeld - How does U-bar vary with doping? Doug - We don't know yet.
Chandra Varma - Does your pair vertex, etc., scale with the antiferromagnetic correlation length? Doug - We don't know yet.