2,028 research outputs found
Excited states of a static dilute spherical Bose condensate in a trap
The Bogoliubov approximation is used to study the excited states of a dilute
gas of atomic bosons trapped in an isotropic harmonic potential
characterized by a frequency and an oscillator length . The self-consistent static Bose condensate has
macroscopic occupation number , with nonuniform spherical condensate
density ; by assumption, the depletion of the condensate is small (). The linearized density fluctuation operator and velocity potential operator satisfy coupled equations
that embody particle conservation and Bernoulli's theorem. For each angular
momentum , introduction of quasiparticle operators yields coupled eigenvalue
equations for the excited states; they can be expressed either in terms of
Bogoliubov coherence amplitudes and that determine the
appropriate linear combinations of particle operators, or in terms of
hydrodynamic amplitudes and . The hydrodynamic picture
suggests a simple variational approximation for that provides an upper
bound for the lowest eigenvalue and an estimate for the
corresponding zero-temperature occupation number ; both expressions
closely resemble those for a uniform bulk Bose condensate.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, contributed paper accepted for Low Temperature
Conference, LT21, August, 199
Energy and Vorticity in Fast Rotating Bose-Einstein Condensates
We study a rapidly rotating Bose-Einstein condensate confined to a finite
trap in the framework of two-dimensional Gross-Pitaevskii theory in the strong
coupling (Thomas-Fermi) limit. Denoting the coupling parameter by 1/\eps^2
and the rotational velocity by , we evaluate exactly the next to
leading order contribution to the ground state energy in the parameter regime
|\log\eps|\ll \Omega\ll 1/(\eps^2|\log\eps|) with \eps\to 0. While the TF
energy includes only the contribution of the centrifugal forces the next order
corresponds to a lattice of vortices whose density is proportional to the
rotational velocity.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX; typos corrected, clarifying remarks added, some
rearrangements in the tex
Random-phase-approximation-based correlation energy functionals: Benchmark results for atoms
The random phase approximation (RPA) for the correlation energy functional of
density functional theory has recently attracted renewed interest. Formulated
in terms of the Kohn-Sham (KS) orbitals and eigenvalues, it promises to resolve
some of the fundamental limitations of the local density and generalized
gradient approximations, as for instance their inability to account for
dispersion forces. First results for atoms, however, indicate that the RPA
overestimates correlation effects as much as the orbital-dependent functional
obtained by a second order perturbation expansion on the basis of the KS
Hamiltonian. In this contribution, three simple extensions of the RPA are
examined, (a) its augmentation by an LDA for short-range correlation, (b) its
combination with the second order exchange term, and (c) its combination with a
partial resummation of the perturbation series including the second order
exchange. It is found that the ground state and correlation energies as well as
the ionization potentials resulting from the extensions (a) and (c) for closed
sub-shell atoms are clearly superior to those obtained with the unmodified RPA.
Quite some effort is made to ensure highly converged RPA data, so that the
results may serve as benchmark data. The numerical techniques developed in this
context, in particular for the inherent frequency integration, should also be
useful for applications of RPA-type functionals to more complex systems.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
An Active-Sterile Neutrino Transformation Solution for r-Process Nucleosynthesis
We discuss how matter-enhanced active-sterile neutrino transformation in both
neutrino and antineutrino channels could enable the production of the rapid
neutron capture (r-process) nuclei in neutrino-heated supernova ejecta. In this
scheme the lightest sterile neutrino would be heavier than the electron
neutrino and split from it by a vacuum mass-squared difference roughly between
3 and 70 eV and vacuum mixing angle given by .Comment: 27 pages plus twelve figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Light nuclei quasiparticle energy shift in hot and dense nuclear matter
Nuclei in dense matter are influenced by the medium. In the cluster mean
field approximation, an effective Schr\"odinger equation for the -particle
cluster is obtained accounting for the effects of the correlated medium such as
self-energy, Pauli blocking and Bose enhancement. Similar to the single-baryon
states (free neutrons and protons), the light elements (,
internal quantum state ) are treated as quasiparticles with energies
. These energies depend on the center of mass
momentum , as well as temperature and the total densities
of neutrons and protons, respectively. No equilibrium is considered so
that (or the corresponding chemical potentials ) are
fixed independently.
For the single nucleon quasiparticle energy shift, different approximate
expressions such as Skyrme or relativistic mean field approaches are well
known. Treating the -particle problem in appropriate approximations, results
for the cluster quasiparticle shifts are given. Properties of dense nuclear
matter at moderate temperatures in the subsaturation density region considered
here are influenced by the composition. This in turn is determined by the
cluster quasiparticle energies, in particular the formation of clusters at low
densities when the temperature decreases, and their dissolution due to Pauli
blocking as the density increases. Our finite-temperature Green function
approach covers different limiting cases: The low-density region where the
model of nuclear statistical equilibrium and virial expansions can be applied,
and the saturation density region where a mean field approach is possible
Energy spectrum and effective mass using a non-local 3-body interaction
We recently proposed a nonlocal form for the 3-body induced interaction that
is consistent with the Fock space representation of interaction operators but
leads to a fractional power dependence on the density. Here we examine the
implications of the nonlocality for the excitation spectrum. In the
two-component weakly interacting Fermi gas, we find that it gives an effective
mass that is comparable to the one in many-body perturbation theory. Applying
the interaction to nuclear matter, it predicts a large enhancement to the
effective mass. Since the saturation of nuclear matter is partly due to the
induced 3-body interaction, fitted functionals should treat the effective mass
as a free parameter, unless the two- and three-body contributions are
determined from basic theory.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; V2 has a table showing the 3-body energies for two
phenomenological energy-density functional
Spin-triplet pairing in large nuclei
The nuclear pairing condensate is expected to change character from
spin-singlet to spin-triplet when the nucleus is very large and the neutron and
proton numbers are equal. We investigate the transition between these two
phases within the framework of the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov equations, using a
zero-range interaction to generate the pairing. We confirm that extremely large
nucleus would indeed favor triplet pairing condensates, with the Hamiltonian
parameters taken from known systematics. The favored phase is found to depend
on the specific orbitals at the Fermi energy. The smallest nuclei with a
well-developed spin-triplet condensate are in the mass region A ~ 130-140.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Wick Theorem for General Initial States
We present a compact and simplified proof of a generalized Wick theorem to
calculate the Green's function of bosonic and fermionic systems in an arbitrary
initial state. It is shown that the decomposition of the non-interacting
-particle Green's function is equivalent to solving a boundary problem for
the Martin-Schwinger hierarchy; for non-correlated initial states a one-line
proof of the standard Wick theorem is given. Our result leads to new
self-energy diagrams and an elegant relation with those of the imaginary-time
formalism is derived. The theorem is easy to use and can be combined with any
ground-state numerical technique to calculate time-dependent properties.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure; extended version published in Phys. Rev.
Analytic vortex solutions in an unusual Mexican hat potential
We introduce an unusual Mexican hat potential, a piecewise parabolic one, and
we show that its vortex solutions can be found analytically, in contrast to the
case of the standard Psi^4 field theory.Comment: 4 pages and 1 figure (missing in this version
Thermal van der Waals Interaction between Graphene Layers
The van de Waals interaction between two graphene sheets is studied at finite
temperatures. Graphene's thermal length controls
the force versus distance as a crossover from the zero temperature
results for , to a linear-in-temperature, universal regime for
. The large separation regime is shown to be a consequence of the
classical behavior of graphene's plasmons at finite temperature. Retardation
effects are largely irrelevant, both in the zero and finite temperature
regimes. Thermal effects should be noticeable in the van de Waals interaction
already for distances of tens of nanometers at room temperature.Comment: enlarged version, 9 pages, 4 figures, updated reference
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