1,673 research outputs found

    Stochastic simulations for the time evolution of systems which obey generalized statistics: Fractional exclusion statistics and Gentile's statistics

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    We present a stochastic method for the simulation of the time evolution in systems which obey generalized statistics, namely fractional exclusion statistics and Gentile's statistics. The transition rates are derived in the framework of canonical ensembles. This approach introduces a tool for describing interacting fermionic and bosonic systems in non-equilibrium as ideal FES systems, in a computationally efficient manner. The two types of statistics are analyzed comparatively, indicating their intrinsic thermodynamic differences and revealing key aspects related to the species size.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, IOP forma

    Anisotropic glass-like properties in tetragonal disordered crystals

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    The low temperature acoustic and thermal properties of amorphous, glassy materials are remarkably similar. All these properties are described theoretically with reasonable quantitative accuracy by assuming that the amorphous solid contains dynamical defects that can be described at low temperatures as an ensemble of two-level systems (TLS), but the deep nature of these TLSs is not clarified yet. Moreover, glassy properties were found also in disordered crystals, quasicrystals, and even perfect crystals with a large number of atoms in the unit cell. In crystals, the glassy properties are not universal, like in amorphous materials, and also exhibit anisotropy. Recently it was proposed a model for the interaction of two-level systems with arbitrary strain fields (Phys. Rev. B 75, 64202, 2007), which was used to calculate the thermal properties of nanoscopic membranes at low temperatures. The model is also suitable for the description of anisotropic crystals. We describe here the results of the calculation of anisotropic glass-like properties in crystals of various lattice symmetries, emphasizing the tetragonal symmetry.Comment: 5 pages, no figure

    Canonical-grandcanonical ensemble in-equivalence in Fermi systems?

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    I discuss the effects of fermionic condensation in systems of constant density of states. I show that the condensation leads to a correction of the chemical potential and of the Fermi distribution in canonical Fermi systems at low temperatures. This implies that the canonical and grandcanonical ensembles are not equivalent even for Fermi systems.Comment: 4 pages and 1 figur

    An ansatz for the exclusion statistics parameters in macroscopic physical systems described by fractional exclusion statistics

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    I introduce an ansatz for the exclusion statistics parameters of fractional exclusion statistics (FES) systems and I apply it to calculate the statistical distribution of particles from both, bosonic and fermionic perspectives. Then, to check the applicability of the ansatz, I calculate the FES parameters in three well-known models: in a Fermi liquid type of system, a one-dimensional quantum systems described in the thermodynamic Bethe ansatz and quasiparticle excitations in the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) systems. The FES parameters of the first two models satisfy the ansatz, whereas those of the third model, although close to the form given by the ansatz, represent an exception. With this ocasion I also show that the general properties of the FES parameters, deduced elsewhere (EPL 87, 60009, 2009), are satisfied also by the parameters of the FQH liquid.Comment: 6 pages, EPL styl

    Fluctuations of the Fermi condensate in ideal gases

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    We calculate numerically and analytically the fluctuations of the fermionic condensate and of the number of particles above the condensate for systems of constant density of states. We compare the canonical fluctuations, obtained from the equivalent Bose condensate fluctuation, with the grandcanonical fermionic calculation. The fluctuations of the condensate are almost the same in the two ensembles, with a small correction comming from the total particle number fluctuation in the grandcanonical ensemble. On the other hand the number of particles above the condensate and its fluctuation is insensitive to the choice of ensemble.Comment: 10 pages with 3 figs. IOP styl

    Scattering of phonons on two-level systems in disordered crystals

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    We calculate the scattering rates of phonons on two-level systems in disordered trigonal and hexagonal crystals. We apply a model in which the two-level system, characterized by a direction in space, is coupled to the strain field of the phonon via a tensor of coupling constants. The structure of the tensor of coupling constants is similar to the structure of the tensor of elastic stiffness constants, in the sense that they are determined by the same symmetry transformations. In this way, we emphasize the anisotropy of the interaction of elastic waves with the ensemble of two-level systems in disordered crystals. We also point to the fact that the ratio γl/γt\gamma_l/\gamma_t has a much broader range of allowed values in disordered crystals than in isotropic solids.Comment: 5 pages, no figure

    Universal heat conductance of one-dimensional channels

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    I analyse the transport of particles of arbitrary statistics (Bose, Fermi and fractional exclusion statistics) through one-dimensional (1D) channels. Observing that the particle, energy, entropy and heat fluxes through the 1D channel are similar to the particle, internal energy, entropy and heat capacity of a quantum gas in a two-dimensional (2D) flat box, respectively, I write analytical expressions for the fluxes at arbitrary temperatures. Using these expressions, I show that the heat and entropy fluxes are independent of statistics at any temperature, and not only in the low temperature limit, as it was previously known. From this perspective, the quanta of heat conductivity represents only the low temperature limit of the 1D channel heat conductance and is equal (up to a multiplicative constant equal to the Plank constant times the density of states at the Fermi energy) to the universal limit of the heat capacity of quantum gases. In the end I also give a microscopic proof for the universal temperature dependence of the entropy and heat fluxes through 1D channels.Comment: Phys. Rev. format, 4 pages, 1 figur

    Quantization of the elastic modes in an isotropic plate

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    We quantize the elastic modes in a plate. For this, we find a complete, orthogonal set of eigenfunctions of the elastic equations and we normalize them. These are the phonon modes in the plate and their specific forms and dispersion relations are manifested in low temperature experiments in ultra-thin membranes.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
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