/Continuous-Limits-of-Quantum-Lattice-Systems

Paper on continous limits of quantum lattice systems

Primary LanguageTeX

Continuous limits of quantum lattice systems

Update

This project will be concluded in the coming days and submitted to the arXiv (with intended deadline 18.01.2019). If you wish to be included in this project please contact me directly as soon as possible.

Introduction

This is an experiment in open science. What you see here is the current latex source of a paper I have been writing on taking continuous limits of quantum lattice systems. This paper is "mostly finished", i.e., the basic idea and constructions are worked out, however much remains to be done. This paper should be readable by anyone with a background in quantum information theory, condensed matter theory, or quantum field theory. (In any event, you should know what a tensor product is and be fascinated by quantum field theory :) )

Objective

The purpose of this experiment is to determine whether github could provide a solid collaborative basis for open science. To this end, coauthors are warmly invited to join in at any time to contribute to fixing and finishing the paper and adding new results. Think of it as a kind of "mini polymath".

I will continue to edit and push commits. When the paper is ready, and after any pull requests and merges, the final version will be submitted to the arXiv and, eventually, a scientific journal for publication.

Guidelines

Please fork this repository if you are interested in contributing. If you fork this paper then please add yourself to the author list in your fork. If you make substantial contributions to the draft then I will merge your changes into the final version and include you on the final submission version author list.

What is a "substantial contribution"? At the moment I define this to be a nontrivial calculation, e.g., working out the details of an example, sorting out some of the unfinished calculations, or similar. Another form of "substantial contribution" is writing one or more paragraphs of new material. Also, nontrivial figures and diagrams, e.g., graphs of interesting quantities, will be considered. Spelling, grammar, and/or stylistic changes do not count as "substantial contributions" (but are still welcome!). This definition is subject to change as the experiment proceeds.

Note: the final author list will be in alphabetical order regardless of the number and form of contributions.