33 research outputs found
Dilute neutron matter on the lattice at next-to-leading order in chiral effective field theory
We discuss lattice simulations of the ground state of dilute neutron matter
at next-to-leading order in chiral effective field theory. In a previous paper
the coefficients of the next-to-leading-order lattice action were determined by
matching nucleon-nucleon scattering data for momenta up to the pion mass. Here
the same lattice action is used to simulate the ground state of up to 12
neutrons in a periodic cube using Monte Carlo. We explore the density range
from 2% to 8% of normal nuclear density and analyze the ground state energy as
an expansion about the unitarity limit with corrections due to finite
scattering length, effective range, and P-wave interactions.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, published versio
Thermodynamic Measurements in a Strongly Interacting Fermi Gas
We conduct a series of measurements on the thermodynamic properties of an
optically-trapped strongly interacting Fermi gas, including the energy ,
entropy , and sound velocity . Our model-independent measurements of
and enable a precision study of the finite temperature thermodynamics. The
data are directly compared to several recent predictions. The
temperature in both the superfluid and normal fluid regime is obtained from the
fundamental thermodynamic relation by parameterizing
the data. Our data are also used to experimentally calibrate the
endpoint temperatures obtained for adiabatic sweeps of the magnetic field
between the ideal and strongly interacting regimes. This enables the first
experimental calibration of the temperature scale used in experiments on
fermionic pair condensation. Our calibration shows that the ideal gas
temperature measured for the onset of pair condensation corresponds closely to
the critical temperature estimated in the strongly interacting regime from the
fits to our data. The results are in very good agreement with recent
predictions. Finally, using universal thermodynamic relations, we estimate the
chemical potential and heat capacity of the trapped gas from the data.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures. To appear in JLTP online, and in the January,
2009 volum
Nearly Perfect Fluidity: From Cold Atomic Gases to Hot Quark Gluon Plasmas
Shear viscosity is a measure of the amount of dissipation in a simple fluid.
In kinetic theory shear viscosity is related to the rate of momentum transport
by quasi-particles, and the uncertainty relation suggests that the ratio of
shear viscosity eta to entropy density s in units of hbar/k_B is bounded by a
constant. Here, hbar is Planck's constant and k_B is Boltzmann's constant. A
specific bound has been proposed on the basis of string theory where, for a
large class of theories, one can show that eta/s is greater or equal to hbar/(4
pi k_B). We will refer to a fluid that saturates the string theory bound as a
perfect fluid. In this review we summarize theoretical and experimental
information on the properties of the three main classes of quantum fluids that
are known to have values of eta/s that are smaller than hbar/k_B. These fluids
are strongly coupled Bose fluids, in particular liquid helium, strongly
correlated ultracold Fermi gases, and the quark gluon plasma. We discuss the
main theoretical approaches to transport properties of these fluids: kinetic
theory, numerical simulations based on linear response theory, and holographic
dualities. We also summarize the experimental situation, in particular with
regard to the observation of hydrodynamic behavior in ultracold Fermi gases and
the quark gluon plasma.Comment: 76 pages, 11 figures, review article, extensive revision