25 research outputs found
The two-body problem of ultra-cold atoms in a harmonic trap
We consider two bosonic atoms interacting with a short-range potential and
trapped in a spherically symmetric harmonic oscillator. The problem is exactly
solvable and is relevant for the study of ultra-cold atoms. We show that the
energy spectrum is universal, irrespective of the shape of the interaction
potential, provided its range is much smaller than the oscillator length.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in Am. Journ. Phy
Density functional theory of the trapped Fermi gas in the unitary regime
We investigate a density-functional theory (DFT) approach for an unpolarized
trapped dilute Fermi gas in the unitary limit . A reformulation of the recent
work of T. Papenbrock [Phys. Rev. A, {\bf 72}, 041602(R) (2005)] in the
language of fractional exclusion statistics allows us to obtain an estimate of
the universal factor, , in three dimensions (3D), in addition to
providing a systematic treatment of finite- corrections. We show that in 3D,
finite- corrections lead to unphysical values for , thereby
suggesting that a simple DFT applied to a small number of particles may not be
suitable in 3D. We then perform an analogous calculation for the
two-dimensional (2D) system in the infinite-scattering length regime, and
obtain a value of . Owing to the unique properties of the
Thomas-Fermi energy density-functional in 2D our result, in contrast to 3D, is
{\em exact} and therefore requires no finite- corrections
s-wave scattering and the zero-range limit of the finite square well in arbitrary dimensions
We examine the zero-range limit of the finite square well in arbitrary
dimensions through a systematic analysis of the reduced, s-wave two-body
time-independent Schr\"odinger equation. A natural consequence of our
investigation is the requirement of a delta-function multiplied by a
regularization operator to model the zero-range limit of the finite-square well
when the dimensionality is greater than one. The case of two dimensions turns
out to be surprisingly subtle, and needs to be treated separately from all
other dimensions
Evaluation of inverse integral transforms for undergraduate physics students
We provide a simple approach for the evaluation of inverse integral
transforms that does not require any knowledge of complex analysis. The central
idea behind the method is to reduce the inverse transform to the solution of an
ordinary differential equation. We illustrate the utility of the approach by
providing examples of the evaluation of transforms, without the use of tables.
We also demonstrate how the method may be used to obtain a general
representation of a function in the form of a series involving the Dirac-delta
distribution and its derivatives, which has applications in quantum mechanics,
semi-classical, and nuclear physics.Comment: 21 Pages, No Figure