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Benford analysis of quantum critical phenomena: First digit provides high finite-size scaling exponent while first two and further are not much better
Authors:Anindita Bera  Utkarsh Mishra  Sudipto Singha Roy  Anindya Biswas  Aditi Sen  Ujjwal Sen
Institution:1. Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Calcutta, 92 Acharya Prafulla Chandra Road, Kolkata 700 009, India;2. Harish-Chandra Research Institute, HBNI, Chhatnag Road, Jhunsi, Allahabad 211 019, India;3. Asia Pacific Center for Theoretical Physics, Pohang, Gyeongbuk 790-784, Republic of Korea;4. Department of Physics, National Institute of Technology Sikkim, India
Abstract:Benford's law is an empirical edict stating that the lower digits appear more often than higher ones as the first few significant digits in statistics of natural phenomena and mathematical tables. A marked proportion of such analyses is restricted to the first significant digit. We employ violation of Benford's law, up to the first four significant digits, for investigating magnetization and correlation data of paradigmatic quantum many-body systems to detect cooperative phenomena, focusing on the finite-size scaling exponents thereof. We find that for the transverse field quantum XY model, behavior of the very first significant digit of an observable, at an arbitrary point of the parameter space, is enough to capture the quantum phase transition in the model with a relatively high scaling exponent. A higher number of significant digits do not provide an appreciable further advantage, in particular, in terms of an increase in scaling exponents. Since the first significant digit of a physical quantity is relatively simple to obtain in experiments, the results have potential implications for laboratory observations in noisy environments.
Keywords:Quantum phase transition  Quantum critical scaling  Benford's law
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