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 Edit this on Wikidata


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 gx4 anharmonicity, for which perturbation theory's divergence is well-known. We obtain the Nth order SCE for the partition function, which is rigorously found to converge exponentially fast in N, and uniformly in gge0. 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 au-method), and find that it compares favorably with all of them for small g and dominates over them for large g. 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 g|x|q with qge0 and complex g. These results allow us to treat the Airy function, and to see the fingerprints of Stokes lines in the SCE.













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