384 research outputs found
Singlets and reflection symmetric spin systems
We rigorously establish some exact properties of reflection symmetric spin
systems with antiferromagnetic crossing bonds: At least one ground state has
total spin zero and a positive semidefinite coefficient matrix. The crossing
bonds obey an ice rule. This augments some previous results which were limited
to bipartite spin systems and is of particular interest for frustrated spin
systems.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX 2
The Ground State Energy of a Dilute Two-dimensional Bose Gas
The ground state energy per particle of a dilute, homogeneous,
two-dimensional Bose gas, in the thermodynamic limit is shown rigorously to be
, to leading order, with
a relative error at most . Here is the
number of particles, is the particle density and is the
scattering length of the two-body potential. We assume that the two-body
potential is short range and nonnegative. The amusing feature of this result is
that, in contrast to the three-dimensional case, the energy, is not
simply times the energy of two particles in a large box of volume
(area, really) . It is much larger
Current Densities in Density Functional Theory
It is well known that any given density rho(x)can be realized by a
determinantal wave function for N particles. The question addressed here is
whether any given density rho(x) and current density j(x) can be simultaneously
realized by a (finite kinetic energy) determinantal wave function. In case the
velocity field v(x) =j(x)/rho(x) is curl free, we provide a solution for all N,
and we provide an explicit upper bound for the energy. If the velocity field is
not curl free, there is a finite energy solution for all N\geq 4, but we do not
provide an explicit energy bound in this case. For N=2 we provide an example of
a non curl free velocity field for which there is a solution, and an example
for which there is no solution. The case $N=3 with a non curl free velocity
field is left open.Comment: 21 pages, latex, reference adde
Columnar Phase in Quantum Dimer Models
The quantum dimer model, relevant for short-range resonant valence bond
physics, is rigorously shown to have long range order in a crystalline phase in
the attractive case at low temperature and not too large flipping term. This
term flips horizontal dimer pairs to vertical pairs (and vice versa) and is
responsible for the word `quantum' in the title. In addition to the dimers,
monomers are also allowed. The mathematical method used is `reflection
positivity'. The model and proof can easily be generalized to dimers or
plaquettes in 3-dimensions.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure. v3: typos correcte
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