We investigate a quantum antidot in the integer quantum Hall regime (the
filling factor is two) by using a Hartree-Fock approach and by transforming the
electron antidot into a system which confines holes via an electron-hole
transformation. We find that its ground state is the maximum density droplet of
holes in certain parameter ranges. The competition between electron-electron
interactions and the confinement potential governs the properties of the hole
droplet such as its spin configuration. The ground-state transitions between
the droplets with different spin configurations occur as magnetic field varies.
For a bell-shape antidot containing about 300 holes, the features of the
transitions are in good agreement with the predictions of a recently proposed
capacitive interaction model for antidots as well as recent experimental
observations. We show this agreement by obtaining the parameters of the
capacitive interaction model from the Hartree-Fock results. An inverse
parabolic antidot is also studied. Its ground-state transitions, however,
display different magnetic-field dependence from that of a bell-shape antidot.
Our study demonstrates that the shape of antidot potential affects its physical
properties significantly.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure