38,195 research outputs found
Density functional theory for hard-sphere mixtures: the White-Bear version Mark II
In the spirit of the White-Bear version of fundamental measure theory we
derive a new density functional for hard-sphere mixtures which is based on a
recent mixture extension of the Carnahan-Starling equation of state. In
addition to the capability to predict inhomogeneous density distributions very
accurately, like the original White-Bear version, the new functional improves
upon consistency with an exact scaled-particle theory relation in the case of
the pure fluid. We examine consistency in detail within the context of
morphological thermodynamics. Interestingly, for the pure fluid the degree of
consistency of the new version is not only higher than for the original
White-Bear version but also higher than for Rosenfeld's original fundamental
measure theory.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; minor changes; J. Phys.: Condens. Matter,
accepte
Large-scale second RPA calculations with finite-range interactions
Second RPA (SRPA) calculations of nuclear response are performed and
analyzed. Unlike in most other SRPA applications, the ground state,
approximated by the Hartree-Fock (HF) ground state, and the residual couplings
are described by the same Hamiltonian and no arbitrary truncations are imposed
on the model space. Finite-range interactions are used and thus divergence
problems are not present. We employ a realistic interaction, derived from the
Argonne V18 potenial using the unitary correlation operator method (UCOM), as
well as the simple Brink-Boeker interaction. Representative results are
discussed, mainly on giant resonances and low-lying collective states. The
focus of the present work is not on the comparison with data, but rather on
technical and physical aspects of the method. We present how the large-scale
eigenvalue problem that SRPA entails can be treated, and demonstrate how the
method operates in producing self-energy corrections and fragmentation. The
so-called diagonal approximation is conditionally validated. Stability problems
are traced back to missing ground-state correlations.Comment: 13 pages, incl. 9 figures, 1 tabl
Reply to Comment on ``Ab Initio Study of 40-Ca with an Importance Truncated No-Core Shell Model''
We respond to Comment on our recent letter (Phys.Rev.Lett.99:092501,2007) by
Dean et al (arXiv:0709.0449).Comment: 2 page
Dynamic structure factor of ultracold Bose and Fermi gases in optical lattices
We investigate the dynamic structure factor of atomic Bose and Fermi gases in
one-dimensional optical lattices at zero temperature. The focus is on the
generic behaviour of S(k,omega) as function of filling and interaction strength
with the aim of identifying possible experimental signatures for the different
quantum phase transitions. We employ the Hubbard or Bose-Hubbard model and
solve the eigenvalue problem of the Hamiltonian exactly for moderate lattice
sizes. This allows us to determine the dynamic structure factor and other
observables directly in the phase transition regime, where approximation
schemes are generally not applicable. We discuss the characteristic signatures
of the various quantum phases appearing in the dynamic structure factor and
illustrate that the centroid of the strength distribution can be used to
estimate the relevant excitation gaps. Employing sum rules, these quantities
can be evaluated using ground state expectation values only. Important
differences between bosonic and fermionic systems are observed, e.g., regarding
the origin of the excitation gap in the Mott-insulator phase.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Multiphase coexistence in polydisperse colloidal mixtures
We study the phase behavior of mixtures of monodisperse colloidal spheres
with a depletion agent which can have arbitrary shape and can possess a
polydisperse size or shape distribution. In the low concentration limit,
considered here, we can employ the free-volume theory and take the geometry of
particles of the depletion agent into account within the framework of
fundamental measure theory. We apply our approach to study the phase diagram of
a mixture of (monodisperse) colloidal spheres and two polydisperse polymer
components. By fine tuning the distribution of the polymer it is possible to
construct a complex phase diagram which exhibits two stable critical points.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Giant Resonances using Correlated Realistic Interactions: The Case for Second RPA
Lately we have been tackling the problem of describing nuclear collective
excitations starting from correlated realistic nucleon-nucleon (NN)
interactions. The latter are constructed within the Unitary Correlation
Operator Method (UCOM), starting from realistic NN potentials. It has been
concluded that first-order RPA with a two-body UCOM interaction is not capable,
in general, of reproducing quantitatively the properties of giant resonances
(GRs), due to missing higher-order configurations and long-range correlations
as well as neglected three-body terms in the Hamiltonian.
Here we report results on GRs obtained by employing a UCOM interaction based
on the Argonne V18 potential in Second RPA (SRPA) calculations. The same
interaction is used to describe the Hartree-Fock (HF) ground state and the
residual interactions. We find that the inclusion of second-order
configurations -- which effectively dress the underlying HF single-particle
states with self-energy insertions -- produces sizable corrections. The effect
appears essential for a realistic description of GRs when using the UCOM. We
argue that effects of higher than second order should be negligible. Therefore,
the UCOM-SRPA emerges as a promising tool for consistent calculations of
collective states in closed-shell nuclei. This is an interesting development,
given that SRPA can accommodate more physics than RPA (e.g., fragmentation).
Remaining discrepancies due to the missing three-body terms and
self-consistency issues of the present SRPA model are pointed out.Comment: 6 pages, incl. 1 figure; Proc. 26th Int. Workshop on Nuclear Theory,
June 2007, Rila mountains, Bulgari
The Unitary Correlation Operator Method from a Similarity Renormalization Group Perspective
We investigate how the Unitary Correlation Operator Method (UCOM), developed
to explicitly describe the strong short-range central and tensor correlations
present in the nuclear many-body system, relates to the Similarity
Renormalization Group (SRG), a method to band-diagonalize Hamiltonians by
continuous unitary transformations. We demonstrate how the structure of the
UCOM transformation, originally motivated from the physically intuitive picture
of correlations in coordinate space, arises naturally from the SRG flow
equation. Apart from formal considerations we show that the momentum space
matrix elements of the effective interactions obtained in both schemes agree
extremely well.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, using REVTEX4; v2: references adde
Mean-field instability of trapped dilute boson-fermion mixtures
The influence of boson-boson and boson-fermion interactions on the stability
of a binary mixture of bosonic and fermionic atoms is investigated. The density
profiles of the trapped mixture are obtained from direct numerical solution of
a modified Gross-Pitaevskii equation that is self-consistently coupled to the
mean-field generated by the interaction with the fermionic species. The
fermions which in turn feel the mean-field created by the bosons are treated in
Thomas-Fermi approximation. We study the effects of different combinations of
signs of the boson-boson and the boson-fermion scattering lengths and determine
explicit expressions for critical particle numbers as function of these
scattering lengths.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (using RevTeX4
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