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arxiv: 2605.16424 · v1 · pith:CGRQ67ISnew · submitted 2026-05-14 · ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech · cond-mat.quant-gas· hep-th

Thermodynamic and statistical properties of a multifractional modified dispersion relation via the grand-canonical ensemble

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 20:35 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech cond-mat.quant-gashep-th
keywords multifractional dispersionmodified thermodynamicsdensity of statesStefan-Boltzmann lawequation of state parametergrand canonical ensembleBose-Einstein condensationdegenerate Fermi gas
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The pith

Multifractional dispersion deforms Stefan-Boltzmann law to scale as E_*^{3/5} T^{17/5}

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes the thermodynamic consequences of a multifractional correction in the dispersion relation for a gas of bosons or fermions. It uses the grand-canonical ensemble to find that the density of states in the ultraviolet regime scales differently, changing how energy and pressure depend on temperature. This matters for models where such corrections could appear at high energies, as it alters key relations like the radiation law and the equation of state. The analysis includes both high and low temperature limits as well as stability and fluctuation properties.

Core claim

In the ultraviolet regime the density of states scales as ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5}, deforming the Stefan-Boltzmann law from u ∝ T^4 to u ∝ E_*^{3/5} T^{17/5} and driving the equation-of-state parameter to w = 5/12 instead of the standard radiation value 1/3. The modified dispersion relation is ω² = k² + 4 E_*^{-1/2} k^{5/2}. Standard behavior is recovered in the infrared with corrections in powers of (T/E_*)^{1/2}. The work derives the grand potential, partition function, and studies thermal stability, fluctuations, condensation for bosons, and degeneracy for fermions.

What carries the argument

The multifractional modified dispersion relation ω² = k² + 4 E_*^{-1/2} k^{5/2} that leads to a density of states ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5} in the ultraviolet and controls all derived thermodynamic quantities.

If this is right

  • Energy density scales as u ∝ E_*^{3/5} T^{17/5} in the ultraviolet.
  • Equation of state parameter w equals 5/12 for the high-energy regime.
  • Critical temperature for Bose-Einstein condensation is increased.
  • Fermi energy and heat capacity are modified for degenerate fermions.
  • Particle number and energy fluctuations receive contributions from the new scaling.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If this dispersion arises from quantum gravity, it could affect predictions for the early universe expansion history.
  • The modified sound speed in the Fermi gas might be observable in condensed matter analogs.
  • One could test the result by simulating the dispersion in a laboratory system and measuring the energy scaling.

Load-bearing premise

The modified dispersion relation is accepted as given and the standard grand-canonical ensemble formulas apply without extra corrections.

What would settle it

Observe or calculate the temperature scaling of the energy density u(T) in the ultraviolet regime for the given dispersion relation and verify if the exponent is 17/5 rather than 4.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.16424 by A. A. Ara\'ujo Filho.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Group velocity vg(k) plotted as a function of k for different values of E∗. 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p008_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: The density of states ϱ(ω) plotted as a function of k for different values of E∗. The density of states in energy space is defined by ϱ(ω) = dN /dω. Using Eq. (21), we have ϱ(ω) = gV 2π 2 k 2 dk dω = gV 2π 2 k 2 vg(k) , (22) where vg(k) = dω/dk is the group velocity. For the spectrum considered here, direct differentiation gives vg(k) = 1 + 5p k/E∗  1 + 4p k/E∗ 1/2 . (23) In [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/ful… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Bosonic pressure as a function of the temperature [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p014_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Bosonic particle number density as a function of the temperature [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Bosonic internal energy density as a function of the temperature [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_5.png] view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Bosonic entropy density as a function of the temperature [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_6.png] view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Bosonic heat capacity as a function of the temperature [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p016_7.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We study the thermodynamic and statistical properties of a gas governed by a multifractional modified dispersion relation of the form $\omega^{2}=k^{2}+4E_{*}^{-1/2}k^{5/2}$, where $E_{*}$ sets the characteristic scale of the multifractional correction. Working within the grand-canonical ensemble, we derive the modified density of states, the grand potential, the partition function, and the main thermodynamic quantities for both bosonic and fermionic sectors. The deformation changes the available phase-space distribution and produces nonstandard thermal scalings controlled by the ratio $T/E_{*}$. In the infrared regime, the usual relativistic gas behavior is recovered with leading corrections proportional to powers of $(T/E_{*})^{1/2}$. In the ultraviolet regime, the density of states scales as $\varrho(\omega)\propto \omega^{7/5}$, corresponding to an effective density-of-states dimension $d_{\mathrm{eff}}=12/5$. As a consequence, the Stefan-Boltzmann law is deformed from $u\propto T^{4}$ to $u\propto E_{*}^{3/5}T^{17/5}$, while the equation-of-state parameter approaches $w=5/12$ instead of the standard radiation value $w=1/3$. We also analyze thermal stability, particle number and energy fluctuations, Bose-Einstein condensation, and the degenerate Fermi gas limit. The multifractional correction increases the critical temperature of a conserved bosonic gas and modifies the Fermi energy, pressure, sound speed, and low-temperature heat capacity of degenerate fermions.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript examines the thermodynamic and statistical properties of a gas obeying the multifractional modified dispersion relation ω² = k² + 4 E_*^{-1/2} k^{5/2} within the grand-canonical ensemble. It derives the modified density of states, grand potential, partition function, and thermodynamic quantities (energy density, pressure, fluctuations) for both bosonic and fermionic statistics. The work recovers standard relativistic behavior in the infrared with (T/E_*)^{1/2} corrections and reports nonstandard ultraviolet scalings: ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5} (effective dimension d_eff = 12/5), energy density u ∝ E_*^{3/5} T^{17/5}, and equation-of-state parameter w = 5/12. Additional results cover thermal stability, Bose-Einstein condensation, and the degenerate Fermi gas limit.

Significance. If the central assumptions hold, the paper supplies explicit, internally consistent calculations of how a concrete modified dispersion alters thermodynamic scalings and phenomena such as BEC critical temperature and Fermi-gas thermodynamics. The reduction to standard results in the IR and the clean extraction of the UV exponents from the given dispersion are strengths. The comprehensive treatment of both statistics and multiple observables increases the utility of the results for models with high-energy dispersion modifications.

major comments (2)
  1. §3 (density of states): The UV claim ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5} follows from the standard expression ρ(ω) = k²/(2π²) |dk/dω| once the dispersion is inverted in the k^{5/2}-dominated regime. The manuscript should explicitly display the inversion ω ≈ 2 E_*^{-1/4} k^{5/4} and the resulting dk/dω to confirm the exponent 7/5 and the E_*^{3/5} prefactor; without these intermediate steps the central scaling cannot be verified from the given dispersion alone.
  2. §4 (equation of state): The result w = 5/12 is obtained from the kinetic-theory identity P = (1/3) ∫ k (dω/dk) f(ω) d³k, which reduces to w = β/3 when ω ∝ k^β with β = 5/4. The paper should state the explicit value of dω/dk extracted from the dispersion in the UV limit to make this reduction transparent and to confirm that no additional multifractional corrections to the pressure-energy relation are assumed.
minor comments (3)
  1. Notation for the density of states is inconsistent (ρ in some sections, ϱ in the abstract); adopt a single symbol throughout.
  2. The range of validity of the UV approximation (where the k^{5/2} term dominates) should be quantified with an explicit inequality involving k and E_*.
  3. A brief comparison table of the IR and UV exponents for u, P, and w would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive and constructive report. The suggestions for greater explicitness in the derivations are well taken and will be incorporated in the revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: §3 (density of states): The UV claim ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5} follows from the standard expression ρ(ω) = k²/(2π²) |dk/dω| once the dispersion is inverted in the k^{5/2}-dominated regime. The manuscript should explicitly display the inversion ω ≈ 2 E_*^{-1/4} k^{5/4} and the resulting dk/dω to confirm the exponent 7/5 and the E_*^{3/5} prefactor; without these intermediate steps the central scaling cannot be verified from the given dispersion alone.

    Authors: We agree that the intermediate algebraic steps should be shown explicitly. In the revised manuscript we will insert, in §3, the UV inversion ω² ≈ 4 E_*^{-1/2} k^{5/2} yielding ω ≈ 2 E_*^{-1/4} k^{5/4}, followed by dω/dk = (5/2) E_*^{-1/4} k^{1/4} and therefore dk/dω = (2/5) E_*^{1/4} k^{-1/4}. Substituting into the standard density-of-states formula and re-expressing k in terms of ω recovers ρ(ω) ∝ E_*^{3/5} ω^{7/5} with d_eff = 12/5. This addition makes the scaling fully verifiable from the given dispersion. revision: yes

  2. Referee: §4 (equation of state): The result w = 5/12 is obtained from the kinetic-theory identity P = (1/3) ∫ k (dω/dk) f(ω) d³k, which reduces to w = β/3 when ω ∝ k^β with β = 5/4. The paper should state the explicit value of dω/dk extracted from the dispersion in the UV limit to make this reduction transparent and to confirm that no additional multifractional corrections to the pressure-energy relation are assumed.

    Authors: We accept the suggestion. In the revised §4 we will state that, in the UV regime, dω/dk ≈ 5 E_*^{-1/4} k^{1/4}. Because this is equivalent to dω/dk ∝ k^{1/4} and ω ∝ k^{5/4}, one has β = 5/4. The kinetic-theory identity then directly yields w = β/3 = 5/12 with no additional multifractional corrections to the pressure-energy relation. The explicit derivative will be displayed to render the reduction transparent. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: standard phase-space integrals applied to externally given dispersion yield the reported scalings as direct algebraic consequences

full rationale

The modified dispersion ω² = k² + 4 E_*^{-1/2} k^{5/2} is introduced as an input with E_* an external scale. The UV density of states ρ(ω) ∝ ω^{7/5} follows immediately from the conventional formula ρ(ω) ∝ k² (dk/dω) after inverting the dominant term to obtain k ∝ ω^{4/5} E_*^{1/5} and substituting; likewise w = 5/12 follows from the standard kinetic-theory identity P = (1/3) ∫ k (dω/dk) f(ω) d³k evaluated on the UV branch ω ∝ k^{5/4}. Both results are expressed in terms of the dimensionless ratio T/E_* and do not reduce to tautologies or fitted parameters within the paper's own equations. No self-citations, uniqueness theorems, or ansätze are invoked to close the derivation; the grand-canonical formulas and flat d³k measure are assumed valid by standard statistical mechanics rather than derived from the dispersion itself.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central results rest on one free parameter E_* that sets the scale of the correction and on the domain assumption that ordinary statistical mechanics applies unchanged to the modified single-particle spectrum.

free parameters (1)
  • E_*
    Characteristic energy scale that controls the strength of the multifractional correction term in the dispersion relation.
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The grand-canonical ensemble remains valid for the modified dispersion relation without further corrections from interactions or field-theoretic renormalization.
    Invoked when deriving the grand potential, partition function, and all thermodynamic quantities from the altered density of states.

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