11,443 research outputs found
An efficient prescription to find the eigenfunctions of point interactions Hamiltonians
A prescription invented a long time ago by Case and Danilov is used to get
the wave function of point interactions in two and three dimensions.Comment: 6 page
Two definitions of the electric polarizability of a bound system in relativistic quantum theory
For the electric polarizability of a bound system in relativistic quantum
theory, there are two definitions that have appeared in the literature. They
differ depending on whether or not the vacuum background is included in the
system. A recent confusion in this connection is clarified
Validity of Feynman's prescription of disregarding the Pauli principle in intermediate states
Regarding the Pauli principle in quantum field theory and in many-body
quantum mechanics, Feynman advocated that Pauli's exclusion principle can be
completely ignored in intermediate states of perturbation theory. He observed
that all virtual processes (of the same order) that violate the Pauli principle
cancel out. Feynman accordingly introduced a prescription, which is to
disregard the Pauli principle in all intermediate processes. This ingeneous
trick is of crucial importance in the Feynman diagram technique. We show,
however, an example in which Feynman's prescription fails. This casts doubts on
the general validity of Feynman's prescription
Many-body system with a four-parameter family of point interactions in one dimension
We consider a four-parameter family of point interactions in one dimension.
This family is a generalization of the usual -function potential. We
examine a system consisting of many particles of equal masses that are
interacting pairwise through such a generalized point interaction. We follow
McGuire who obtained exact solutions for the system when the interaction is the
-function potential. We find exact bound states with the four-parameter
family. For the scattering problem, however, we have not been so successful.
This is because, as we point out, the condition of no diffraction that is
crucial in McGuire's method is not satisfied except when the four-parameter
family is essentially reduced to the -function potential.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Comment on ``Validity of Feynman's prescription of disregarding the Pauli principle in intermediate states''
In a recent paper Coutinho, Nogami and Tomio [Phys. Rev. A 59, 2624 (1999);
quant-ph/9812073] presented an example in which, they claim, Feynman's
prescription of disregarding the Pauli principle in intermediate states of
perturbation theory fails. We show that, contrary to their claim, Feynman's
prescription is consistent with the exact solution of their example.Comment: 1 pag
Topological Approach to Microcanonical Thermodynamics and Phase Transition of Interacting Classical Spins
We propose a topological approach suitable to establish a connection between
thermodynamics and topology in the microcanonical ensemble. Indeed, we report
on results that point to the possibility of describing {\it interacting
classical spin systems} in the thermodynamic limit, including the occurrence of
a phase transition, using topology arguments only. Our approach relies on Morse
theory, through the determination of the critical points of the potential
energy, which is the proper Morse function. Our main finding is to show that,
in the context of the studied classical models, the Euler characteristic
embeds the necessary features for a correct description of several
magnetic thermodynamic quantities of the systems, such as the magnetization,
correlation function, susceptibility, and critical temperature. Despite the
classical nature of the studied models, such quantities are those that do not
violate the laws of thermodynamics [with the proviso that Van der Waals loop
states are mean field (MF) artifacts]. We also discuss the subtle connection
between our approach using the Euler entropy, defined by the logarithm of the
modulus of per site, and that using the {\it Boltzmann}
microcanonical entropy. Moreover, the results suggest that the loss of
regularity in the Morse function is associated with the occurrence of unstable
and metastable thermodynamic solutions in the MF case. The reliability of our
approach is tested in two exactly soluble systems: the infinite-range and the
short-range models in the presence of a magnetic field. In particular, we
confirm that the topological hypothesis holds for both the infinite-range () and the short-range () models. Further studies are very
desirable in order to clarify the extension of the validity of our proposal
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