117 research outputs found

    Diquark Bose-Einstein condensation

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    Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of composite diquarks in quark matter (the color superconductor phase) is discussed using the quasi-chemical equilibrium theory at a relatively low density region near the deconfinement phase transition, where dynamical quark-pair fluctuations are assumed to be described as bosonic degrees of freedom (diquarks). A general formulation is given for the diquark formation and particle-antiparticle pair-creation processes in the relativistic flamework, and some interesting properties are shown, which are characteristic for the relativistic many-body system. Behaviors of transition temperature and phase diagram of the quark-diquark matter are generally presented in model parameter space, and their asymptotic behaviors are also discussed. As an application to the color superconductivity, the transition temperatures and the quark and diquark density profiles are calculated in case with constituent/current quarks, where the diquark is in bound/resonant state. We obtained TC6080T_C \sim 60-80 MeV for constituent quarks and TC130T_C \sim 130 MeV for current quarks at a moderate density (ρb3ρ0\rho_b \sim 3 \rho_0). The method is also developed to include interdiquark interactions into the quasi-chemical equilibrium theory within a mean-field approximation, and it is found that a possible repulsive diquark-diquark interaction lowers the transition temperature by nearly 50%.Comment: 21 pages, 23 figure

    Phenomenological theory of cuprate superconductivity

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    Reasonably good agreement with the superconducting transitiontemperatures of the cuprate high‐T c superconductors can be obtained on the basis of an approximate phenomenological theory. In this theory, two criteria are used to calculate the superconducting transitiontemperature. One is that the quantum wavelength is of the order of the electron‐pair spacing. The other is that a fraction of the normal carriers exist as Cooper pairs at T c . The resulting simple equation for T c contains only two parameters: the normal carrier density and effective mass. We calculate specific transition temperatures for 12 cuprate superconductors

    Magnetic Properties of a Bose-Einstein Condensate

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    Three hyperfine states of Bose-condensed sodium atoms, recently optically trapped, can be described as a spin-1 Bose gas. We study the behaviour of this system in a magnetic field, and construct the phase diagram, where the temperature of the Bose condensation TBECT_{BEC} increases with magnetic field. In particular the system is ferromagnetic below TBECT_{BEC} and the magnetization is proportional to the condensate fraction in a vanishing magnetic field. Second derivatives of the magnetisation with regard to temperature or magnetic field are discontinuous along the phase boundary.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures included, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Molecular formations in ultracold mixtures of interacting and noninteracting atomic gases

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    Atom-molecule equilibrium for molecular formation processes is discussed for boson-fermion, fermion-fermion, and boson-boson mixtures of ultracold atomic gases in the framework of quasichemical equilibrium theory. After presentation of the general formulation, zero-temperature phase diagrams of the atom-molecule equilibrium states are calculated analytically; molecular, mixed, and dissociated phases are shown to appear for the change of the binding energy of the molecules. The temperature dependences of the atom or molecule densities are calculated numerically, and finite-temperature phase structures are obtained of the atom-molecule equilibrium in the mixtures. The transition temperatures of the atom or molecule Bose-Einstein condensations are also evaluated from these results. Quantum-statistical deviations of the law of mass action in atom-molecule equilibrium, which should be satisfied in mixtures of classical Maxwell-Boltzmann gases, are calculated, and the difference in the different types of quantum-statistical effects is clarified. Mean-field calculations with interparticle interactions (atom-atom, atom-molecule, and molecule-molecule) are formulated, where interaction effects are found to give the linear density-dependent term in the effective molecular binding energies. This method is applied to calculations of zero-temperature phase diagrams, where new phases with coexisting local-equilibrium states are shown to appear in the case of strongly repulsive interactions.Comment: 35 pages, 14 figure

    Metal-Insulator Transition in the Two-Dimensional Hubbard Model at Half-Filling with Lifetime Effects within the Moment Approach

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    We explore the effect of the imaginary part of the self-energy, ImΣ(k,ω)Im\Sigma(\vec{k},\omega), having a single pole, Ω(k,ω)\Omega(\vec{k},\omega), with spectral weight, α(k)\alpha(\vec{k}), and quasi-particle lifetime, Γ(k)\Gamma(\vec{k}), on the density of states. We solve the set of parameters, Ω(k,ω\Omega(\vec{k},\omega), α(k)\alpha(\vec{k}), and Γ(k)\Gamma(\vec{k}) by means of the moment approach (exact sum rules) of Nolting. Our choice for Σ(k,ω)\Sigma(k,\omega), satisfies the Kramers - Kronig relationship automatically. Due to our choice of the self - energy, the system is not a Fermi liquid for any value of the interaction, a result which is also true in the moment approach of Nolting without lifetime effects. By increasing the value of the local interaction, U/WU/W, at half-filling (ρ=1/2\rho = 1/2), we go from a paramagnetic metal to a paramagnetic insulator, (Mott metal - insulator transition (MMITMMIT)) for values of U/WU/W of the order of U/W1U/W \geq 1 (WW is the band width) which is in agreement with numerical results for finite lattices and for infinity dimensions (D=D = \infty). These results settle down the main weakness of the spherical approximation of Nolting: a finite gap for any finite value of the interaction, i.e., an insulator for any finite value of U/WU/W. Lifetime effects are absolutely indispensable. Our scheme works better than the one of improving the narrowing band factor, B(k)B(\vec{k}), beyond the spherical approximation of Nolting.Comment: 5 pages and 5 ps figures (included

    Bose-Einstein condensation of atomic gases in a harmonic oscillator confining potential trap

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    We present a model which predicts the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation in atomic alkali gases and find excellent agreement with recent experimental observations. A system of bosons confined by a harmonic oscillator potential is not characterized by a critical temperature in the same way as an identical system which is not confined. We discuss the problem of Bose-Einstein condensation in an isotropic harmonic oscillator potential analytically and numerically for a range of parameters of relevance to the study of low temperature gases of alkali metals.Comment: 11 pages latex with two postscript figure

    Optimal interlayer hopping and high temperature Bose–Einstein condensation of local pairs in quasi 2D superconductors

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    Both FeSe and cuprate superconductors are quasi 2D materials with high transition temperatures and local fermion pairs. Motivated by such systems, we investigate real space pairing of fermions in an anisotropic lattice model with intersite attraction, V, and strong local Coulomb repulsion, U, leading to a determination of the optimal conditions for superconductivity from Bose–Einstein condensation. Our aim is to gain insight as to why high temperature superconductors tend to be quasi 2D. We make both analytically and numerically exact solutions for two body local pairing applicable to intermediate and strong V. We find that the Bose–Einstein condensation temperature of such local pairs pairs is maximal when hopping between layers is intermediate relative to in-plane hopping, indicating that the quasi 2D nature of unconventional superconductors has an important contribution to their high transition temperatures

    The Bean-Livingston barrier at a superconductor/magnet interface

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    The Bean-Livingston barrier at the interface of type-II superconductor/soft-magnet heterostructures is studied on the basis of the classical London approach. This shows a characteristic dependence on the geometry of the particular structure and its interface as well as on the relative permeability of the involved magnetic constituent. The modification of the barrier by the presence of the magnet can be significant, as demonstrated for a cylindrical superconducting filament covered with a coaxial magnetic sheath. Using typical values of the relative permeability, the critical field of first penetration of magnetic flux is predicted to be strongly enhanced, whereas the variation of the average critical current density with the external field is strongly depressed, in accord with the observations of recent experiments.Comment: RevTeX 4; revised version; accepted in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
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