2,707 research outputs found

    ODD Metrics

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    We introduce the concept of ODD ('O\mathbf{O}rthogonally D\mathbf{D}egenerating on a D\mathbf{D}ivisor') Riemannian metrics on real analytic manifolds MM. These semipositive symmetric 22-tensors may degenerate on a finite collection of submanifolds, while their restrictions to these submanifolds satisfy the inductive compatibility criterion to be an ODD metric again. In this first in a series of articles on these metrics, we show that they satisfy basic properties that hold for Riemannian metrics. For example, we introduce orthonormal frames, the lowering and raising of indices, ODD volume forms and the Levi-Civita connection. We finally show that an ODD metric induces a metric space structure on MM and that at least at general points of the degeneracy locus D\mathcal{D}, ODD vector fields are integrable and ODD geodesics exist and are unique.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures; comments are very welcome

    Evolution from few- to many-body physics in one-dimensional Fermi systems: One- and two-body density matrices, and particle-partition entanglement

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    We study the evolution from few- to many-body physics of fermionic systems in one spatial dimension with attractive pairwise interactions. We determine the detailed form of the momentum distribution, the structure of the one-body density matrix, and the pairing properties encoded in the two-body density matrix. From the low- and high-momentum scaling behavior of the single-particle momentum distribution we estimate the speed of sound and Tan's contact, respectively. Both quantities are found to be in agreement with previous calculations. Based on our calculations of the one-body density matrices, we also present results for the particle-partition entanglement entropy, for which we find a logarithmic dependence on the total particle number.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, published versio

    Surmounting the sign problem in non-relativistic calculations: a case study with mass-imbalanced fermions

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    The calculation of the ground state and thermodynamics of mass-imbalanced Fermi systems is a challenging many-body problem. Even in one spatial dimension, analytic solutions are limited to special configurations and numerical progress with standard Monte Carlo approaches is hindered by the sign problem. The focus of the present work is on the further development of methods to study imbalanced systems in a fully non-perturbative fashion. We report our calculations of the ground-state energy of mass-imbalanced fermions using two different approaches which are also very popular in the context of the theory of the strong interaction (Quantum Chromodynamics, QCD): (a) the hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm with imaginary mass imbalance, followed by an analytic continuation to the real axis; and (b) the Complex Langevin algorithm. We cover a range of on-site interaction strengths that includes strongly attractive as well as strongly repulsive cases which we verify with non-perturbative renormalization group methods and perturbation theory. Our findings indicate that, for strong repulsive couplings, the energy starts to flatten out, implying interesting consequences for short-range and high-frequency correlation functions. Overall, our results clearly indicate that the Complex Langevin approach is very versatile and works very well for imbalanced Fermi gases with both attractive and repulsive interactions.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
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