Localization of a quantum particle in a classical one-component plasma. II. Dynamic Disorder and Temporal Decorrelation
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 00:29 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For slow quantum particles in a dynamic plasma the Coulomb logarithm vanishes and the localization length scales as the inverse cube root of wave number.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Within the eikonal approximation the effective disorder strength felt by a moving quantum particle is written in terms of the dielectric function of the ion plasma after the dynamic potential correlator is obtained from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and Kramers-Kronig relations. When particle velocity drops well below the ion thermal speed the Coulomb logarithm is eliminated and disorder strength grows linearly with velocity. The resulting strong-disorder localization length therefore diverges as k to the minus one-third, indicating that ultra-slow particles remain delocalized in a dynamic plasma, in contrast to the saturation found in the static limit.
What carries the argument
Dynamic potential correlator obtained from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and Kramers-Kronig relations, expressed through the dielectric function of the ion plasma inside the eikonal straight-line approximation.
If this is right
- Particles moving faster than the ion thermal speed recover the static Coulomb logarithm with its large-distance cutoff replaced by the dynamic scale set by velocity over the ion plasma frequency.
- For particles much slower than the thermal speed the Coulomb logarithm disappears and disorder strength becomes directly proportional to velocity.
- The strong-disorder localization length then diverges as k to the minus one-third for slow particles instead of saturating at a finite value.
- A crossover between the quasi-static and dynamic regimes occurs when particle speed becomes comparable to the ion thermal speed.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The velocity dependence of the disorder strength may alter estimates of quantum diffusion or mobility in time-fluctuating plasmas.
- Similar decorrelation effects could modify localization criteria in other systems whose scatterers possess an intrinsic time scale, such as electrolytes or liquid metals.
- Numerical trajectory simulations in fluctuating ionic backgrounds could directly test the predicted linear growth of disorder strength with velocity.
Load-bearing premise
The eikonal straight-line approximation remains accurate when the effective disorder strength is expressed through the plasma dielectric function.
What would settle it
Compute or measure the decay rate of the averaged Green function for a quantum particle whose speed is much smaller than the ion thermal speed and check whether the localization length grows proportionally to the inverse cube root of wave number rather than approaching a constant.
read the original abstract
We extend the static theory of disorder-induced exponential decay of the averaged Green function of a quantum charged particle in a classical one-component plasma to the dynamic regime by incorporating the temporal evolution of the ionic density fluctuations within the random phase approximation. The dynamic potential correlator is derived from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and the Kramers--Kronig relations. Within the eikonal (straight-line) approximation, the effective disorder strength is expressed through the dielectric function of the ion plasma. For particles moving faster than the ion thermal speed, the static Coulomb logarithm is recovered, with the large-distance cutoff replaced by the dynamic scale $v/\omega_{pi}$. For slow particles, the Coulomb logarithm disappears completely and the disorder strength becomes proportional to the velocity, leading to a fundamentally different scaling of the localization length. In particular, the strong-disorder length diverges as $k^{-1/3}$ for $v\ll v_{\mathrm{th}}$, whereas it saturates in the static limit, indicating that ultra-slow particles are not exponentially localized in a dynamic plasma. A crossover between the quasi-static and dynamic regimes occurs when the particle speed becomes comparable to the ion thermal speed.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper extends the static theory of disorder-induced exponential decay of the averaged Green function for a quantum charged particle in a classical one-component plasma to the dynamic regime. It incorporates the temporal evolution of ionic density fluctuations within the random phase approximation, derives the dynamic potential correlator from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and Kramers-Kronig relations, and expresses the effective disorder strength through the ion dielectric function using the eikonal (straight-line) approximation. For fast particles (v > v_th), the static Coulomb logarithm is recovered with a dynamic cutoff v/ω_pi replacing the large-distance cutoff. For slow particles (v ≪ v_th), the Coulomb logarithm vanishes entirely, the disorder strength becomes proportional to velocity, and the strong-disorder localization length diverges as k^{-1/3} (in contrast to saturation in the static limit), implying that ultra-slow particles are not exponentially localized in a dynamic plasma. A crossover occurs near v ≈ v_th.
Significance. If the central derivations hold, the work identifies a qualitatively new regime of dynamic disorder in quantum localization within plasmas, where temporal decorrelation eliminates the Coulomb logarithm and alters the scaling of the localization length for slow particles. This distinction from the static case could inform models of particle transport in time-varying Coulomb systems, such as laboratory or astrophysical plasmas. The reliance on established tools (RPA, FDT, Kramers-Kronig) provides a solid foundation, though the novelty rests on the dynamic extension and its consequences for the localization length.
major comments (1)
- [Derivation of effective disorder strength for slow particles (following application of FDT, Kramers-Kronig, and eikonal)] The eikonal (straight-line) approximation, used to express the effective disorder strength via the dielectric function after obtaining the dynamic correlator, requires explicit validation or error bounds in the slow-particle regime (v ≪ v_th). In this limit the transit time across a correlation volume becomes long and the particle kinetic energy can fall below typical potential fluctuations, potentially violating the conditions for neglecting trajectory curvature or diffraction. Because the claimed disappearance of the Coulomb logarithm and the k^{-1/3} divergence of the strong-disorder length are derived precisely under this approximation, its breakdown would remove the predicted distinction from the static limit.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract and results sections] Clarify the physical meaning of the wave number k appearing in the k^{-1/3} scaling of the localization length, and specify the precise definition of the strong-disorder length throughout the text.
- [Results and discussion] Add a quantitative discussion or plot showing the crossover between quasi-static and dynamic regimes as a function of v/v_th, including the range where the dynamic cutoff v/ω_pi is applicable.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive criticism of our manuscript. The single major comment raises a valid point about the eikonal approximation that we address directly below. We will incorporate additional discussion and validation to strengthen the presentation of the slow-particle results.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The eikonal (straight-line) approximation, used to express the effective disorder strength via the dielectric function after obtaining the dynamic correlator, requires explicit validation or error bounds in the slow-particle regime (v ≪ v_th). In this limit the transit time across a correlation volume becomes long and the particle kinetic energy can fall below typical potential fluctuations, potentially violating the conditions for neglecting trajectory curvature or diffraction. Because the claimed disappearance of the Coulomb logarithm and the k^{-1/3} divergence of the strong-disorder length are derived precisely under this approximation, its breakdown would remove the predicted distinction from the static limit.
Authors: We agree that the eikonal approximation merits explicit discussion in the slow-particle limit. The approximation enters after the dynamic potential correlator has been obtained from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and Kramers-Kronig relations; it is used only to evaluate the accumulated phase along the trajectory when computing the effective disorder strength. Because the ions evolve on the plasma-frequency timescale, temporal decorrelation occurs even for long transit times, which reduces the effective potential variation experienced by the particle and partially justifies the straight-line assumption. Nevertheless, we acknowledge that curvature and diffraction corrections could become non-negligible when the particle kinetic energy is comparable to or smaller than typical potential fluctuations. In the revised manuscript we will add a new paragraph (in the section deriving the effective disorder strength) that (i) recalls the standard validity condition for the eikonal approximation (de Broglie wavelength much smaller than the correlation length), (ii) estimates the leading curvature correction via a perturbative expansion of the trajectory, and (iii) shows that this correction remains small throughout the regime where the dynamic Coulomb logarithm vanishes and the k^{-1/3} scaling appears. We will also state the quantitative bounds on v/v_th for which the reported scaling is expected to hold. These additions will not alter the central derivations or conclusions but will make the domain of applicability transparent. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation uses independent standard relations.
full rationale
The paper derives the dynamic potential correlator from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and Kramers-Kronig relations, applies the eikonal approximation to obtain the effective disorder strength via the ion dielectric function, and obtains the v-proportional scaling for slow particles directly from that construction. These steps rely on external physical principles and approximations rather than reducing by definition or self-citation to the target result. The extension from the static case (part I) is not load-bearing for the novel dynamic claims, and no fitted inputs, ansatzes smuggled via citation, or uniqueness theorems are invoked in a circular manner. The derivation remains self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- dynamic cutoff scale v/ω_pi
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Random phase approximation for ionic density fluctuations
- domain assumption Eikonal (straight-line) approximation for particle trajectory
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Gdyn =−2m²q₀²kBT/πℏ⁴ ∫ dk/k ∫₀^{kv} dω/ω Im(1/ε(k,ω)); slow limit yields Gdyn ∝ v/v_th and ℓ∝k^{-1/3}
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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Possible Topological Decoherence Transition in Relativistic Electron Beams Propagating through Coulomb-Disordered Media
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Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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