Jump to content

Lieb–Liniger model

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ReyHahn (talk | contribs) at 09:52, 30 June 2024 (reshaping article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In physics, the Lieb–Liniger model describes a gas of particles moving in one dimension and satisfying Bose–Einstein statistics. It is sometimes called a one dimensional Bose gas with Dirac delta interaction. It also can be considered as quantum non-linear Schrödinger equation.[1][2] It is named after Elliott H. Lieb and Werner Liniger who introduced the model in 1963.[1]

Definition

Fig. 1: The ground state energy, from.[1] See text.

Given bosons with moving on the -axis that goes from , with periodic boundary conditions, a state of the N-body system must be described by a many-body wave function . The Hamiltonian, of this model is introduced as

where is the Dirac delta function. The constant denotes its strength. The delta function gives rise to a boundary condition when two coordinates, say and are equal; this condition is that as , the derivative satisfies . The hard core limit is known as the Tonks–Girardeau gas.[3]

For a collection of bosons, the wave function is unchanged under permutation of any two particles (permutation symmetry), i.e., for all and satisfies for all .

Solution

The time-independent Schrödinger equation , is solved by explicit construction of . Since is symmetric it is completely determined by its values in the simplex , defined by the condition that .

where the sum is over all permutations, , of the integers , and maps to . The coefficients , as well as the 's are determined by the condition , and this leads to

[4]

These equations determine in terms of the 's. These lead to equations:

where are integers when is odd and, when is even, they take values . For the ground state the 's satisfy

References

  1. ^ a b c Elliott H. Lieb and Werner Liniger, Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. I. The General Solution and the Ground State, Physical Review 130: 1605–1616, 1963
  2. ^ Elliott H. Lieb, Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. II. The Excitation Spectrum, Physical Review 130:1616–1624,1963
  3. ^ Girardeau, Marvin (1960). "Relationship between Systems of Impenetrable Bosons and Fermions in One Dimension". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 1 (6): 516–523. Bibcode:1960JMP.....1..516G. doi:10.1063/1.1703687.
  4. ^ Dorlas, Teunis C. (1993). "Orthogonality and Completeness of the Bethe Ansatz Eigenstates of the nonlinear Schrödinger model". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 154 (2): 347–376. Bibcode:1993CMaPh.154..347D. doi:10.1007/BF02097001. S2CID 122730941.
  • See also Elliott H. Lieb (2008), Scholarpedia, 3(12):8712.[1]