58,824 research outputs found
Local Physical Coodinates from Symplectic Projector Method
The basic arguments underlying the symplectic projector method are presented.
By this method, local free coordinates on the constrait surface can be obtained
for a broader class of constrained systems. Some interesting examples are
analyzed.Comment: 8 page
Equation of state of a seven-dimensional hard-sphere fluid. Percus-Yevick theory and molecular dynamics simulations
Following the work of Leutheusser [Physica A 127, 667 (1984)], the solution
to the Percus-Yevick equation for a seven-dimensional hard-sphere fluid is
explicitly found. This allows the derivation of the equation of state for the
fluid taking both the virial and the compressibility routes. An analysis of the
virial coefficients and the determination of the radius of convergence of the
virial series are carried out. Molecular dynamics simulations of the same
system are also performed and a comparison between the simulation results for
the compressibility factor and theoretical expressions for the same quantity is
presented.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; v3: Equation (A.19) corrected (see
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2390712
Demixing can occur in binary hard-sphere mixtures with negative non-additivity
A binary fluid mixture of non-additive hard spheres characterized by a size
ratio and a non-additivity parameter
is considered in infinitely many
dimensions. From the equation of state in the second virial approximation
(which is exact in the limit ) a demixing transition with a
critical consolute point at a packing fraction scaling as
is found, even for slightly negative non-additivity, if
. Arguments concerning the stability of the
demixing with respect to freezing are provided.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; title changed; final paragraph added; to be
published in PRE as a Rapid Communicatio
A New Form of Path Integral for the Coherent States Representation and its Semiclassical Limit
The overcompleteness of the coherent states basis leads to a multiplicity of
representations of Feynman's path integral. These different representations,
although equivalent quantum mechanically, lead to different semiclassical
limits. Two such semiclassical formulas were derived in \cite{Bar01} for the
two corresponding path integral forms suggested by Klauder and Skagerstan in
\cite{Klau85}. Each of these formulas involve trajectories governed by a
different classical representation of the Hamiltonian operator: the P
representation in one case and the Q representation in other. In this paper we
construct a third representation of the path integral whose semiclassical limit
involves directly the Weyl representation of the Hamiltonian operator, i.e.,
the classical Hamiltonian itself.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
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