806 research outputs found
Quenched Disorder From Sea-Bosons
The degenerate Fermi gas coupled to a random potential is used to study
metal-insulator transitions in various dimensions.
We first recast the problem in the sea-boson language that allows for an easy
evaluation of important physical attributes.
We evaluate the dynamical number-number correlation function and from this
compute the a.c. conductivity.
We find that the d.c. conductivity vanishes in one and two dimensions.
For a hamiltonian that forbids scattering of an electron from within the
Fermi surface to another state within the Fermi surface we find that there is
no metal-insulator transition in three dimensions either.Comment: 8 pages, Plain LaTe
Hydrodynamic Formulation of the Hubbard Model
In this article, we show how to recast the Hubbard model in one dimension in
a hydrodynamic language and use the path integral approach to compute the
one-particle Green function.
We compare with the Bethe ansatz results of
Schulz and find exact agreement with the formulas for spin and charge
velocities and anomalous exponent in weak coupling regime.
These methods may be naturally generalized to more than one dimension by
simply promoting wavenumbers to wavevectors.Comment: 7 pages, no fig
Sea-Boson Theory of Landau Fermi Liquids, Luttinger Liquids and Wigner Crystals
It is shown how Luttinger liquids may be studied using sea-bosons.
The main advantage of the sea-boson method is its ability to provide
information about short-wavelength physics in addition to the asymptotics and
is naturally generalisable to more than one dimension.
In this article, we solve the Luttinger model and the Calogero-Sutherland
model, the latter in the weak-coupling limit.
The anomalous exponent we obtain in the former case is identical to the one
obtained by Mattis and Lieb.
We also apply this method to solve the two-dimensional analog of the
Luttinger model and show that the system is a Landau Fermi liquid.
Then we solve the model of spinless fermions in one-dimension with long-range
(gauge) interactions and map the Wigner crystal phase of the system.Comment: 19 pages, RevTeX, 3 eps figs, final published versio
Sea-Boson Analysis of the Infinite-U Hubbard Model
By expanding the projection operator in powers of the density fluctuations,
we conjecture a hamiltonian purely quadratic in the sea-bosons that reproduces
the right spin and charge velocities and exponent for the case
in one dimension known from the work of Schulz.
Then we argue that by simply promoting wavenumbers to wave vectors we are
able to study the two dimensional case. We find that the quasiparticle residue
takes a value close to half-filling where it is the smallest.
This is in exact agreement with the prediction by Castro-Neto and Fradkin
nearly ten years ago. We also compute the magnetic suceptibility and find that
it diverges close to half-filling consistent with Nagakoka's theorem.Comment: 7 pages (revtex), radically revise
Momentum Distribution of a Weakly Coupled Fermi Gas
We apply the sea-boson method to compute the momentum distribution of a
spinless continuum Fermi gas in two space dimensions with short-range repulsive
interactions. We find that the ground state of the system is a Landau Fermi
liquid(). We also apply this method to study the
one-dimensional system when the interactions are long-ranged gauge
interactions. We map the Wigner crystal phase of this system.Comment: 5 pages, plain LaTe
Exact Momentum Distribution of a Fermi Gas in One Dimension
We introduce an exactly solvable model of a fermi gas in one dimension and
compute the momentum distribution exactly. This is based on a generalisation of
the ideas of bosonization in one dimension. It is shown that in the RPA
limit(the ultra-high density limit) the answers we get are the exact answers
for a homogeneous fermi gas interacting via a two-body repulsive coulomb
interaction. Furthermore, the solution may be obtained exactly for arbitrary
functional forms of the interaction, so long as it is purely repulsive. No
linearization of the bare fermion dispersion is required. We find that for the
interaction considered, the fermi surface is intact for weak repulsion and is
destroyed only for sufficiently strong repulsion. Comparison with other models
like the supersymmetric t-J model with inverse square interactions is made.Comment: RevTex, 5 pages, no figures., modified following ref. comments, more
detailed explanations, resutls same, one new ref. adde
Exact Dynamical Structure Factor of a Bose Liquid
Based on ideas introduced in a previous preprint cond-mat/9701206 we propose
an exactly solvable model of bosons interacting amongst themselves via a
Van-der Waal-like repulsive interaction, and compute both the filling fraction
and the dynamical structure factor exactly. The novelty of this approach
involves introducing, analogous to Fermi sea (or surface) displacements, Bose
fields that in this case, correspond to fluctuations of the Bose condensate.
The exact dynamical structure factor has a coherent part that corresponds to
the Bogoliubov spectrum and an incoherent part that is a result of
correlations.Comment: RevTex, 6 pages, no figures, replaced previously empty fil
A.C. Conductivity of a Disordered Metal
The degenerate free Fermi gas coupled to a random potential is used to
compute a.c. conductivity in various dimensions. We first formally diagonalise
the hamiltonian using an appropriate basis that is a functional of the disorder
potential. Then we compute the a.c. conductivity at zero temperature using the
Kubo formula. This a.c. conductivity is a functional of the disordered
potential. The wavefunction of extended states is written as exponential of the
logarithm. We use the cumulant expansion to compute the disordered averaged
a.c. conductivity for Gaussian disorder. The formula is valid if a certain
linearization approximation is valid in the long-wavelength limit.Comment: 22 pages, no figs., Plain LaTe
Myopic Bosonization
As the title suggests, this is an attempt at bosonizing fermions in any
number of dimensions without paying attention to the fact that the Fermi
surface is an extended object. One is tempted to introduce the density
fluctuation and its conjugate and recast the interacting problem in terms of
these canonical Bose fields. However, we find that the attempt is short-sighted
figuratively as well for the same reason.
But surprisingly, this flaw, which manifests itself as an inconsistency
between Menikoff-Sharp's construction of the kinetic energy operator in terms
of currents and densities, and our ansatz for this operator, is nevertheless
able to reproduce(although reluctantly) many salient features of the free
theory.
Buoyed by this success, we solve the interacting problem and compute the full
propagator.Comment: 3 pages RevTe
Momentum Distribution of the Hubbard Model
Using the recently perfected sea-boson method, we compute the momentum
distribution of the one-band Hubbard model in one and two spatial dimensions.
We compute the asymptotic features of the momentum distribution explicitly
away from half filling for weak coupling in one and two dimensions. While the
results are not exact by any means, they provide the exact asymptotics, namely
they are able to reproduce the exponents obtained by Shulz in one dimension
obtained using Bethe ansatz. The corresponding results in more than one
dimension are therefore as believeable.Comment: 12 pages, LaTex, 2d case revised, new formula for field operato
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