59 research outputs found
Consequences of the Pauli exclusion principle for the Bose-Einstein condensation of atoms and excitons
The bosonic atoms used in present day experiments on Bose-Einstein
condensation are made up of fermionic electrons and nucleons. In this Letter we
demonstrate how the Pauli exclusion principle for these constituents puts an
upper limit on the Bose-Einstein-condensed fraction. Detailed numerical results
are presented for hydrogen atoms in a cubic volume and for excitons in
semiconductors and semiconductor bilayer systems. The resulting condensate
depletion scales differently from what one expects for bosons with a repulsive
hard-core interaction. At high densities, Pauli exclusion results in
significantly more condensate depletion. These results also shed a new light on
the low condensed fraction in liquid helium II.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revised version, now includes a direct comparison
with hard-sphere QMC results, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Polynomial complexity despite the fermionic sign
It is commonly believed that in quantum Monte Carlo approaches to fermionic
many- body problems, the infamous sign problem generically implies
prohibitively large computational times for obtaining thermodynamic-limit
quantities. We point out that for convergent Feynman diagrammatic series
evaluated with the Monte Carlo algorithm of [Rossi, arXiv:1612.05184], the
computational time increases only polynomially with the inverse error on
thermodynamic-limit quantities
Diagrammatic Monte Carlo algorithm for the resonant Fermi gas
We provide a description of a diagrammatic Monte Carlo algorithm for the
resonant Fermi gas in the normal phase. Details are given on diagrammatic
framework, Monte Carlo moves, and incorporation of ultraviolet asymptotics.
Apart from the self-consistent bold scheme, we also describe a
non-self-consistent scheme, for which the ultraviolet treatment is more
involved.Comment: Revised and extended versio
Schwinger-Dyson equations in large-N quantum field theories and nonlinear random processes
We propose a stochastic method for solving Schwinger-Dyson equations in
large-N quantum field theories. Expectation values of single-trace operators
are sampled by stationary probability distributions of the so-called nonlinear
random processes. The set of all histories of such processes corresponds to the
set of all planar diagrams in the perturbative expansions of the expectation
values of singlet operators. We illustrate the method on the examples of the
matrix-valued scalar field theory and the Weingarten model of random planar
surfaces on the lattice. For theories with compact field variables, such as
sigma-models or non-Abelian lattice gauge theories, the method does not
converge in the physically most interesting weak-coupling limit. In this case
one can absorb the divergences into a self-consistent redefinition of expansion
parameters. Stochastic solution of the self-consistency conditions can be
implemented as a "memory" of the random process, so that some parameters of the
process are estimated from its previous history. We illustrate this idea on the
example of two-dimensional O(N) sigma-model. Extension to non-Abelian lattice
gauge theories is discussed.Comment: 16 pages RevTeX, 14 figures; v2: Algorithm for the Weingarten model
corrected; v3: published versio
High-precision numerical solution of the Fermi polaron problem and large-order behavior of its diagrammatic series
We introduce a simple determinant diagrammatic Monte Carlo algorithm to
compute the ground-state properties of a particle interacting with a Fermi sea
through a zero-range interaction. The fermionic sign does not cause any
fundamental problem when going to high diagram orders, and we reach order
. The data reveal that the diagrammatic series diverges exponentially as
with a radius of convergence . Furthermore, on the polaron
side of the polaron-dimeron transition, the value of is determined by a
special class of three-body diagrams, corresponding to repeated scattering of
the impurity between two particles of the Fermi sea. A power-counting argument
explains why finite is possible for zero-range interactions in three
dimensions. Resumming the divergent series through a conformal mapping yields
the polaron energy with record accuracy
Diagrammatic Monte Carlo for Correlated Fermions
We show that Monte Carlo sampling of the Feynman diagrammatic series (DiagMC)
can be used for tackling hard fermionic quantum many-body problems in the
thermodynamic limit by presenting accurate results for the repulsive Hubbard
model in the correlated Fermi liquid regime. Sampling Feynman's diagrammatic
series for the single-particle self-energy we can study moderate values of the
on-site repulsion () and temperatures down to . We
compare our results with high temperature series expansion and with single-site
and cluster dynamical mean-field theory.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, stylistic change
Integrable models for asymmetric Fermi superfluids: Emergence of a new exotic pairing phase
We introduce an exactly-solvable model to study the competition between the
Larkin-Ovchinnikov-Fulde-Ferrell (LOFF) and breached-pair superfluid in
strongly interacting ultracold asymmetric Fermi gases. One can thus investigate
homogeneous and inhomogeneous states on an equal footing and establish the
quantum phase diagram. For certain values of the filling and the interaction
strength, the model exhibits a new stable exotic pairing phase which combines
an inhomogeneous state with an interior gap to pair-excitations. It is proven
that this phase is the exact ground state in the strong coupling limit, while
numerical examples demonstrate that also at finite interaction strength it can
have lower energy than the breached-pair or LOFF states.Comment: Revised version accepted for publicatio
From Popov-Fedotov trick to universal fermionization
We show that Popov-Fedotov trick of mapping spin-1/2 lattice systems on
two-component fermions with imaginary chemical potential readily generalizes to
bosons with a fixed (but not limited) maximal site occupation number, as well
as to fermionic Hamiltonians with various constraints on the site Fock states.
In a general case, the mapping---fermionization---is on multi-component
fermions with many-body non-Hermitian interactions. Additionally, the
fermionization approach allows one to convert large many-body couplings into
single-particle energies, rendering the diagrammatic series free of large
expansion parameters; the latter is essential for the efficiency and
convergence of the diagrammatic Monte Carlo method.Comment: 4 pages, no figures (v2 contains some improvements; the most
important one is the generic complex chemical potential trick for
spins/bosons
Regularization of Diagrammatic Series with Zero Convergence Radius
The divergence of perturbative expansions for the vast majority of
macroscopic systems, which follows from Dyson's collapse argument, prevents
Feynman's diagrammatic technique from being directly used for controllable
studies of strongly interacting systems. We show how the problem of divergence
can be solved by replacing the original model with a convergent sequence of
successive approximations which have a convergent perturbative series. As a
prototypical model, we consider the zero-dimensional
theory.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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