1,531 research outputs found
Bose-Einstein condensation at finite temperatures: Mean field laws with periodic microstructure
At finite temperatures below the phase transition point, the Bose-Einstein
condensation, the macroscopic occupation of a single quantum state by particles
of integer spin, is not complete. In the language of superfluid helium, this
means that the superfluid coexists with the normal fluid. Our goal is to
describe this coexistence in trapped, dilute atomic gases with repulsive
interactions via mean field laws that account for a {\em spatially varying}
particle interaction strength. By starting with the -body Hamiltonian, , we formally derive a system of coupled, nonlinear evolution equations in
dimensions for the following quantities: (i) the wave function of the
macroscopically occupied state; and (ii) the single-particle wave functions of
thermally excited states. For stationary (bound) states and a scattering length
with {\em periodic microstructure} of subscale , we heuristically
extract effective equations of motion via periodic homogenization up to second
order in .Comment: 28 page
On solutions of Maxwell's equations with dipole sources over a thin conducting film
We derive and interpret solutions of time-harmonic Maxwell's equations with a
vertical and a horizontal electric dipole near a planar, thin conducting film,
e.g. graphene sheet, lying between two unbounded isotropic and non-magnetic
media. Exact expressions for all field components are extracted in terms of
rapidly convergent series of known transcendental functions when the ambient
media have equal permittivities and both the dipole and observation point lie
on the plane of the film. These solutions are simplified for all distances from
the source when the film surface resistivity is large in magnitude compared to
the intrinsic impedance of the ambient space. The formulas reveal the
analytical structure of two types of waves that can possibly be excited by the
dipoles and propagate on the film. One of these waves is intimately related to
the surface plasmon-polariton of transverse-magnetic (TM) polarization of plane
waves.Comment: 48 pages, 4 figure
Unification of step bunching phenomena on vicinal surfaces
We unify step bunching (SB) instabilities occurring under various conditions on crystal surfaces below roughening. We show that when attachment-detachment of atoms at step edges is the rate-limiting process, the SB of interacting, concentric circular steps is equivalent to the commonly observed SB of interacting straight steps under deposition, desorption, or drift. We derive a continuum Lagrangian partial differential equation, which is used to study the onset of instabilities for circular steps. These findings place on a common ground SB instabilities from numerical simulations for circular steps and experimental observations of straight steps
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