11 research outputs found
Mean-atom-trajectory model for the velocity autocorrelation function of monatomic liquids
We present a model for the motion of an average atom in a liquid or
supercooled liquid state and apply it to calculations of the velocity
autocorrelation function and diffusion coefficient . The model
trajectory consists of oscillations at a distribution of frequencies
characteristic of the normal modes of a single potential valley, interspersed
with position- and velocity-conserving transits to similar adjacent valleys.
The resulting predictions for and agree remarkably well with MD
simulations of Na at up to almost three times its melting temperature. Two
independent processes in the model relax velocity autocorrelations: (a)
dephasing due to the presence of many frequency components, which operates at
all temperatures but which produces no diffusion, and (b) the transit process,
which increases with increasing temperature and which produces diffusion.
Because the model provides a single-atom trajectory in real space and time,
including transits, it may be used to calculate all single-atom correlation
functions.Comment: LaTeX, 8 figs. This is an updated version of cond-mat/0002057 and
cond-mat/0002058 combined Minor changes made to coincide with published
versio
Local Variational Principle
A generalization of the Gibbs-Bogoliubov-Feynman inequality for spinless
particles is proven and then illustrated for the simple model of a symmetric
double-well quartic potential. The method gives a pointwise lower bound for the
finite-temperature density matrix and it can be systematically improved by the
Trotter composition rule. It is also shown to produce groundstate energies
better than the ones given by the Rayleigh-Ritz principle as applied to the
groundstate eigenfunctions of the reference potentials. Based on this
observation, it is argued that the Local Variational Principle performs better
than the equivalent methods based on the centroid path idea and on the
Gibbs-Bogoliubov-Feynman variational principle, especially in the range of low
temperatures.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, one more section adde
Recommended from our members
SEMICLASSICAL STATISTICAL MECHANICS OF FLUIDS. II. AN IMPROVED MEAN FIELD EFFECTIVE PAIR POTENTIAL
Recommended from our members
ON THE QUANTUM MECHANICAL IMPLICATIONS OF CLASSICAL ERGODICITY
Experimental and theoretical studies of pump-probe electron diffraction: time-dependent and state-specific signatures in small cyclic molecules
Tricritical universality in a two-dimensional spin fluid
Monte Carlo simulations are used to investigate the tricritical point
properties of a 2d spin fluid. Measurements of the scaling operator
distributions are employed in conjunction with a finite-size scaling analysis
to locate the tricritical point and determine the directions of the relevant
scaling fields and their associated tricritical exponents. The scaling operator
distributions and exponents are shown to match quantitatively those of the 2d
Blume-Capel model, confirming that both models belong to the same universality
class. Mean-field calculations of the tricritical point properties are also
compared with the simulation measurements.Comment: 9 pages Revtex, 7 ps figures (uuencoded). Phys. Rev. E. (in press).
Paper also available from
http://moses.physik.uni-mainz.de/~wilding/home_wilding.htm
