A Deal with the Devil: From Divergent Perturbation Theory to an Exponentially-Convergent Self-Consistent Expansion
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Publication:6299207
DOI10.1103/PHYSREVD.98.056017arXiv1803.06631WikidataQ129249523 ScholiaQ129249523MaRDI QIDQ6299207FDOQ6299207
Authors: Benjamin Remez, Moshe Goldstein
Publication date: 18 March 2018
Abstract: For many nonlinear physical systems, approximate solutions are pursued by conventional perturbation theory in powers of the non-linear terms. Unfortunately, this often produces divergent asymptotic series, collectively dismissed by Abel as "an invention of the devil." An alternative method, the self-consistent expansion (SCE), has been introduced by Schwartz and Edwards. Its basic idea is a rescaling of the zeroth-order system around which the solution is expanded, to achieve optimal results. While low-order SCEs have been remarkably successful in describing the dynamics of non-equilibrium many-body systems (e.g., the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation), its convergence properties have not been elucidated before. To address this issue we apply this technique to the canonical partition function of the classical harmonic oscillator with a quartic anharmonicity, for which perturbation theory's divergence is well-known. We obtain the th order SCE for the partition function, which is rigorously found to converge exponentially fast in , and uniformly in . We use our results to elucidate the relation between the SCE and the class of approaches based on the so-called "order-dependent mapping." Moreover, we put the SCE to test against other methods that improve upon perturbation theory (Borel resummation, hyperasymptotics, Pad'e approximants, and the Lanczos -method), and find that it compares favorably with all of them for small and dominates over them for large . The SCE is shown to successfully capture the correct partition function for the double-well potential case, where no perturbative expansion exists. Our treatment is generalized to the case of many oscillators, as well as to any nonlinearity of the form with and complex . These results allow us to treat the Airy function, and to see the fingerprints of Stokes lines in the SCE.
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