Landau-Ginzburg Theory for Anderson localization
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The Typical Medium Theory provides conceptually the simplest order parameter description of Anderson localization by self-consistently calculating the geometrically-averaged (typical) local density of states (LDOS). Here we show how spatial correlations can also be captured within such a self-consistent theory, by utilizing the standard Landau method of allowing for (slow) spatial fluctuations of the order parameter, and performing an appropriate gradient expansion. Our theoretical results provide insight into recent STM experiments, which were used to visualize the spatially fluctuating electronic wave functions near the metal insulator transition in $Ga_{1-x}Mn_{x}As.$ We show that, within our theory, all features of the experiment can be accounted for by considering a model of disorder renormalized by long-range Coulomb interactions. This includes the pseudogap formation, the $C(R)\sim\frac{1}{R}$ form of the LDOS autocorrelations function, and the $\zeta\sim\frac{1}{E}$ energy dependence of the correlation length at criticality.
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