234 research outputs found

    Dynamical Correlations in a Half-Filled Landau Level

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    We formulate a self-consistent field theory for the Chern-Simons fermions to study the dynamical response function of the quantum Hall system at ν=1/2\nu=1/2. Our scheme includes the effect of correlations beyond the random-phase approximation (RPA) employed to this date for this system. The resulting zero-frequency density response function vanishes as the square of the wave vector in the long-wavelength limit. The longitudinal conductivity calculated in this scheme shows linear dependence on the wave vector, like the experimentals results and the RPA, but the absolute values are higher than the experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 3 figures included. Corrected typo

    Exchange-correlation potential for Current Density Functional Theory of frequency dependent linear response

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    The dynamical, long-wavelength longitudinal and transverse exchange-correlation potentials for a homogeneous electron gas are evaluated in a microscopic model based on an approximate decoupling of the equation of motion for the current-current response function. The transverse spectrum turns out to be very similar to the longitudinal one. We obtain evidence for a strong spectral structure near twice the plasma frequency due to a two-plasmon threshold for two-pair excitations, which may be observable in inelastic scattering experiments. Our results give the entire input needed to implement the Time-Dependent Current Density Functional Theory scheme recently developed by G. Vignale and W. Kohn [Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 2037 (1996)] and are fitted to analytic functions to facilitate such applications.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Screened Interaction and Self-Energy in an Infinitesimally Polarized Electron Gas via the Kukkonen-Overhauser Method

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    The screened electron-electron interaction Wσ,σW_{\sigma, \sigma'} and the electron self-energy in an infinitesimally polarized electron gas are derived by extending the approach of Kukkonen and Overhauser. Various quantities in the expression for Wσ,σW_{\sigma, \sigma'} are identified in terms of the relevant response functions of the electron gas. The self-energy is obtained from Wσ,σW_{\sigma, \sigma'} by making use of the GW method which in this case represents a consistent approximation. Contact with previous calculations is made.Comment: 7 page

    Dynamic correlations in symmetric electron-electron and electron-hole bilayers

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    The ground-state behavior of the symmetric electron-electron and electron-hole bilayers is studied by including dynamic correlation effects within the quantum version of Singwi, Tosi, Land, and Sjolander (qSTLS) theory. The static pair-correlation functions, the local-field correction factors, and the ground-state energy are calculated over a wide range of carrier density and layer spacing. The possibility of a phase transition into a density-modulated ground state is also investigated. Results for both the electron-electron and electron-hole bilayers are compared with those of recent diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) simulation studies. We find that the qSTLS results differ markedly from those of the conventional STLS approach and compare in the overall more favorably with the DMC predictions. An important result is that the qSTLS theory signals a phase transition from the liquid to the coupled Wigner crystal ground state, in both the electron-electron and electron-hole bilayers, below a critical density and in the close proximity of layers (d <~ r_sa_0^*), in qualitative agreement with the findings of the DMC simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 2 table

    Many-body approach to the nonlinear interaction of charged particles with an interacting free electron gas

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    We report various many-body theoretical approaches to the nonlinear decay rate and energy loss of charged particles moving in an interacting free electron gas. These include perturbative formulations of the scattering matrix, the self-energy, and the induced electron density. Explicit expressions for these quantities are obtained, with inclusion of exchange and correlation effects.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Journal of Physics

    Theory of spin and charge fluctuations in the Hubbard model

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    A self-consistent theory of both spin and charge fluctuations in the Hubbard model is presented. It is in quantitative agreement with Monte Carlo data at least up to intermediate coupling (U8t)(U\sim 8t). It includes both short-wavelength quantum renormalization effects, and long-wavelength thermal fluctuations which can destroy long-range order in two dimensions. This last effect leads to a small energy scale, as often observed in high temperature superconductors. The theory is conserving, satisfies the Pauli principle and includes three-particle correlations necessary to account for the incipient Mott transition.Comment: J1K 2R1 10 pages, Revtex 3.0, 4 uuencoded postscript figures, report# CRPS-93-4

    Linear density response in the random phase approximation for confined Bose vapours at finite temperature

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    A linear response framework is set up for the evaluation of collective excitations in a confined vapour of interacting Bose atoms at finite temperature. Focusing on the currently relevant case of contact interactions between the atoms, the theory is developed within a random phase approximation with exchange. This approach is naturally introduced in a two-fluid description by expressing the density response of both the condensate and the non-condensate in terms of the response of a Hartree-Fock reference gas to the selfconsistent Hartree-Fock potentials. Such an approximate account of correlations (i) preserves an interplay between the condensate and the non-condensate through off-diagonal components of the response, which instead vanish in the Hartree-Fock-Bogolubov approximation; and (ii) yields a common resonant structure for the four partial response functions. The theory reduces to the temperature-dependent Hartree-Fock-Bogolubov-Popov approximation for the fluctuations of the condensate when its coupling with the density fluctuations of the non-condensate is neglected. Analytic results are presented which are amenable to numerical calculations and to inclusion of damping rates.Comment: 14 pages. To appear on J. Phys. : Condens. Matte

    The on-top pair-correlation density in the homogeneous electron liquid

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    The ladder theory, in which the Bethe-Goldstone equation for the effective potential between two scattering particles plays a central role, is well known for its satisfactory description of the short-range correlations in the homogeneous electron liquid. By solving exactly the Bethe-Goldstone equation in the limit of large transfer momentum between two scattering particles, we obtain accurate results for the on-top pair-correlation density g(0)g(0), in both three dimensions and two dimensions. Furthermore, we prove, in general, the ladder theory satisfies the cusp condition for the pair-correlation density g(r)g(r) at zero distance r=0r=0.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Non-perturbative approach to the attractive Hubbard model

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    A non-perturbative approach to the single-band attractive Hubbard model is presented in the general context of functional derivative approaches to many-body theories. As in previous work on the repulsive model, the first step is based on a local-field type ansatz, on enforcement of the Pauli principle and a number of crucial sum-rules. The Mermin-Wagner theorem in two dimensions is automatically satisfied. At this level, two-particle self-consistency has been achieved. In the second step of the approximation, an improved expression for the self-energy is obtained by using the results of the first step in an exact expression for the self-energy where the high- and low-frequency behaviors appear separately. The result is a cooperon-like formula. The required vertex corrections are included in this self-energy expression, as required by the absence of a Migdal theorem for this problem. Other approaches to the attractive Hubbard model are critically compared. Physical consequences of the present approach and agreement with Monte Carlo simulations are demonstrated in the accompanying paper (following this one).Comment: Revtex, 19 page

    Electron Correlations in an Electron Bilayer at Finite Temperature: Landau Damping of the Acoustic Plasmon

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    We report angle-resolved Raman scattering observations of the temperature dependent Landau damping of the acoustic plasmon in an electron bilayer system realised in a GaAs double quantum well structure. Corresponding calculations of the charge-density excitation spectrum of the electron bilayer using forms of the random phase approximation (RPA), and the static local field formalism of Singwi, Tosi, Land and Sj\"{o}lander (STLS) extended to incorporate non-zero electron temperature TeT_{\rm e} and phenomenological damping, are also presented. The STLS calculations include details of the temperature dependence of the intra- and inter-layer local field factors and pair-correlation functions. Good agreement between experiment and the various theories is obtained for the acoustic plasmon energy and damping for TeTF/2T_{\rm e} \lesssim T_{\rm F}/2, the Fermi temperature. However, contrary to current expectations, all of the calculations show significant departures from our experimental data for TeTF/2T_{\rm e} \gtrsim T_{\rm F}/2. From this, we go on to demonstrate unambiguously that real local field factors fail to provide a physically accurate description of exchange correlation behaviour in low dimensional electron gases. Our results suggest instead that one must resort to a {\em{dynamical}} local field theory, characterised by a {\em{complex}} field factor to provide a more accurate description.Comment: 53 pages, 16 figure
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