English

Spectral Density and Sum Rules for Second-Order Response Functions

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2025-03-19 v2 Statistical Mechanics Strongly Correlated Electrons

Abstract

Sum rules for linear response functions give powerful and experimentally-relevant relations between frequency moments of response functions and ground state properties. In particular, renewed interest has been drawn to optical conductivity and density-density sum rules and their connection to quantum geometry in topological materials. At the same time, recent work has also illustrated the connection between quantum geometry and second-order nonlinear response functions in quantum materials, motivating the search for exact sum rules for second-order response that can provide experimental probes and theoretical constraints for geometry and topology in these systems. Here we begin to address these questions by developing a general formalism for deriving sum rules for second-order response functions. Using generalized Kramers-Kronig relations, we show that the second-order Kubo formula can be expressed in terms of a spectral density that is a sum of Dirac delta functions in frequency. We show that moments of the spectral density can be expressed in terms of averages of equal-time commutators, yielding a family of generalized sum rules; furthermore, these sum rules constrain the large-frequency asymptotic behavior of the second harmonic generation rate. We apply our formalism to study generalized ff-sum rules for the second-order density-density response function and the longitudinal nonlinear conductivity. We show that for noninteracting electrons in solids, the generalized ff-sum rule can be written entirely in terms of matrix elements of the Bloch Hamiltonian. Finally, we derive a family of sum rules for rectification response, determining the large-frequency asymptotic behavior of the time-independent response to a harmonic perturbation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2404.16144,
  title  = {Spectral Density and Sum Rules for Second-Order Response Functions},
  author = {Barry Bradlyn and Peter Abbamonte},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.16144},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

v2: accepted version, 18 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:05:30.858Z