73,726 research outputs found
Relativistic N-boson systems bound by pair potentials V(r_{ij}) = g(r_{ij}^2)
We study the lowest energy E of a relativistic system of N identical bosons
bound by pair potentials of the form V(r_{ij}) = g(r_{ij}^2) in three spatial
dimensions. In natural units hbar = c = 1 the system has the semirelativistic
`spinless-Salpeter' Hamiltonian H = \sum_{i=1}^N \sqrt{m^2 + p_i^2} +
\sum_{j>i=1}^N g(|r_i - r_j|^2), where g is monotone increasing and has
convexity g'' >= 0. We use `envelope theory' to derive formulas for general
lower energy bounds and we use a variational method to find complementary upper
bounds valid for all N >= 2. In particular, we determine the energy of the
N-body oscillator g(r^2) = c r^2 with error less than 0.15% for all m >= 0, N
>= 2, and c > 0.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Discrete spectra of semirelativistic Hamiltonians from envelope theory
We analyze the (discrete) spectrum of the semirelativistic
``spinless-Salpeter'' Hamiltonian H = \beta \sqrt{m^2 + p^2} + V(r), beta > 0,
where V(r) represents an attractive, spherically symmetric potential in three
dimensions. In order to locate the eigenvalues of H, we extend the ``envelope
theory,'' originally formulated only for nonrelativistic Schroedinger
operators, to the case of Hamiltonians H involving the relativistic
kinetic-energy operator. If V(r) is a convex transformation of the Coulomb
potential -1/r and a concave transformation of the harmonic-oscillator
potential r^2, both upper and lower bounds on the discrete eigenvalues of H can
be constructed, which may all be expressed in the form E = min_{r>0} [ \beta
\sqrt{m^2 + P^2/r^2} + V(r) ] for suitable values of the numbers P here
provided. At the critical point, the relative growth to the Coulomb potential
h(r) = -1/r must be bounded by dV/dh < 2 \beta/\pi.Comment: 20 pages, 2 tables, 4 figure
Energy bounds for the spinless Salpeter equation: harmonic oscillator
We study the eigenvalues E_{n\ell} of the Salpeter Hamiltonian H =
\beta\sqrt(m^2 + p^2) + vr^2, v>0, \beta > 0, in three dimensions. By using
geometrical arguments we show that, for suitable values of P, here provided,
the simple semi-classical formula E = min_{r > 0} {v(P/r)^2 + \beta\sqrt(m^2 +
r^2)} provides both upper and lower energy bounds for all the eigenvalues of
the problem.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Convexity and potential sums for Salpeter-like Hamiltonians
The semirelativistic Hamiltonian H = \beta\sqrt{m^2 + p^2} + V(r), where V(r)
is a central potential in R^3, is concave in p^2 and convex in p. This fact
enables us to obtain complementary energy bounds for the discrete spectrum of
H. By extending the notion of 'kinetic potential' we are able to find general
energy bounds on the ground-state energy E corresponding to potentials with the
form V = sum_{i}a_{i}f^{(i)}(r). In the case of sums of powers and the log
potential, where V(r) = sum_{q\ne 0} a(q) sgn(q)r^q + a(0)ln(r), the bounds can
all be expressed in the semi-classical form E \approx \min_{r}{\beta\sqrt{m^2 +
1/r^2} + sum_{q\ne 0} a(q)sgn(q)(rP(q))^q + a(0)ln(rP(0))}. 'Upper' and 'lower'
P-numbers are provided for q = -1,1,2, and for the log potential q = 0. Some
specific examples are discussed, to show the quality of the bounds.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Coulomb plus power-law potentials in quantum mechanics
We study the discrete spectrum of the Hamiltonian H = -Delta + V(r) for the
Coulomb plus power-law potential V(r)=-1/r+ beta sgn(q)r^q, where beta > 0, q >
-2 and q \ne 0. We show by envelope theory that the discrete eigenvalues
E_{n\ell} of H may be approximated by the semiclassical expression
E_{n\ell}(q) \approx min_{r>0}\{1/r^2-1/(mu r)+ sgn(q) beta(nu r)^q}.
Values of mu and nu are prescribed which yield upper and lower bounds.
Accurate upper bounds are also obtained by use of a trial function of the form,
psi(r)= r^{\ell+1}e^{-(xr)^{q}}. We give detailed results for
V(r) = -1/r + beta r^q, q = 0.5, 1, 2 for n=1, \ell=0,1,2, along with
comparison eigenvalues found by direct numerical methods.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Semiclassical energy formulas for power-law and log potentials in quantum mechanics
We study a single particle which obeys non-relativistic quantum mechanics in
R^N and has Hamiltonian H = -Delta + V(r), where V(r) = sgn(q)r^q. If N \geq 2,
then q > -2, and if N = 1, then q > -1. The discrete eigenvalues E_{n\ell} may
be represented exactly by the semiclassical expression E_{n\ell}(q) =
min_{r>0}\{P_{n\ell}(q)^2/r^2+ V(r)}. The case q = 0 corresponds to V(r) =
ln(r). By writing one power as a smooth transformation of another, and using
envelope theory, it has earlier been proved that the P_{n\ell}(q) functions are
monotone increasing. Recent refinements to the comparison theorem of QM in
which comparison potentials can cross over, allow us to prove for n = 1 that
Q(q)=Z(q)P(q) is monotone increasing, even though the factor Z(q)=(1+q/N)^{1/q}
is monotone decreasing. Thus P(q) cannot increase too slowly. This result
yields some sharper estimates for power-potential eigenvlaues at the bottom of
each angular-momentum subspace.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Relativistic N-Boson Systems Bound by Oscillator Pair Potentials
We study the lowest energy E of a relativistic system of N identical bosons
bound by harmonic-oscillator pair potentials in three spatial dimensions. In
natural units the system has the semirelativistic ``spinless-Salpeter''
Hamiltonian H = \sum_{i=1}^N \sqrt{m^2 + p_i^2} + \sum_{j>i=1}^N gamma |r_i -
r_j|^2, gamma > 0. We derive the following energy bounds: E(N) = min_{r>0} [N
(m^2 + 2 (N-1) P^2 / (N r^2))^1/2 + N (N-1) gamma r^2 / 2], N \ge 2, where
P=1.376 yields a lower bound and P=3/2 yields an upper bound for all N \ge 2. A
sharper lower bound is given by the function P = P(mu), where mu =
m(N/(gamma(N-1)^2))^(1/3), which makes the formula for E(2) exact: with this
choice of P, the bounds coincide for all N \ge 2 in the Schroedinger limit m
--> infinity.Comment: v2: A scale analysis of P is now included; this leads to revised
energy bounds, which coalesce in the large-m limi
Semirelativistic stability of N-boson systems bound by 1/r pair potentials
We analyze a system of self-gravitating identical bosons by means of a
semirelativistic Hamiltonian comprising the relativistic kinetic energies of
the involved particles and added (instantaneous) Newtonian gravitational pair
potentials. With the help of an improved lower bound to the bottom of the
spectrum of this Hamiltonian, we are able to enlarge the known region for
relativistic stability for such boson systems against gravitational collapse
and to sharpen the predictions for their maximum stable mass.Comment: 11 pages, considerably enlarged introduction and motivation,
remainder of the paper unchange
Asymptotic iteration method for eigenvalue problems
An asymptotic interation method for solving second-order homogeneous linear
differential equations of the form y'' = lambda(x) y' + s(x) y is introduced,
where lambda(x) \neq 0 and s(x) are C-infinity functions. Applications to
Schroedinger type problems, including some with highly singular potentials, are
presented.Comment: 14 page
Status of ultrachemical analysis for semiconductors
Status of ultratrace chemical analyses of materials for semiconductors was studied. This study covered atomic absorption spectroscopy, emission spectroscopy, and activation analyses. It makes recommendations to improve sensitivity, reliability and versatility for ultratrace chemical analysis
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