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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

BCS-to-BEC Quantum Phase Transition in High-Tc Superconductors and Fermionic Atomic Gases: A Functional Integral Approach

Botelho, Sergio S. 12 September 2005 (has links)
The problem of the evolution from BCS theory with cooperative Cooper pairing to the formation and condensation of composite bosons has attracted considerable attention for the past several decades. It has gained renewed impetus in the mid-eighties with the discovery of the high-Tc superconductors, which have a coherence length comparable to the interparticle spacing. More recently, this subject has spurred a great deal of research activity in connection with experiments involving dilute atomic gases of fermionic atoms. The initial objective of this work will be to use functional integral techniques to analyze the low-temperature BCS-to-BEC evolution of d-wave superconductors within the saddle point (mean field) approximation for a continuum model. Then, the same mathematical formalism will be applied to the problem of the BCS-to-BEC evolution of fully spin-polarized p-wave Fermi gases in two dimensions. We find that a quantum phase transition occurs for both systems as they are driven from the BCS-like regime of weakly interacting fermionic pairs to the opposite BEC-like regime of strongly interacting bosonic molecules. This is in contrast to the smooth crossover predicted and observed in systems that exhibit s-wave pairing symmetry. We calculate several spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties that signal the occurrence of this phase transition, and suggest some possible experimental realizations. Finally, fluctuations about the saddle point solution are included in the calculations, and the effects of such correction are analyzed in the low (T~0) and high (T~Tc) temperature limits. We conclude that, at high temperatures, the bosonic degrees of freedom that arise from two-particle bound states become essential to describe the strong coupling limit, as the saddle point approximation alone becomes unreliable.
2

Quantum Monte Carlo Studies of Strongly Interacting Fermionic Systems

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: In this dissertation two kinds of strongly interacting fermionic systems were studied: cold atomic gases and nucleon systems. In the first part I report T=0 diffusion Monte Carlo results for the ground-state and vortex excitation of unpolarized spin-1/2 fermions in a two-dimensional disk. I investigate how vortex core structure properties behave over the BEC-BCS crossover. The vortex excitation energy, density profiles, and vortex core properties related to the current are calculated. A density suppression at the vortex core on the BCS side of the crossover and a depleted core on the BEC limit is found. Size-effect dependencies in the disk geometry were carefully studied. In the second part of this dissertation I turn my attention to a very interesting problem in nuclear physics. In most simulations of nonrelativistic nuclear systems, the wave functions are found by solving the many-body Schrödinger equations, and they describe the quantum-mechanical amplitudes of the nucleonic degrees of freedom. In those simulations the pionic contributions are encoded in nuclear potentials and electroweak currents, and they determine the low-momentum behavior. By contrast, in this work I present a novel quantum Monte Carlo formalism in which both relativistic pions and nonrelativistic nucleons are explicitly included in the quantum-mechanical states of the system. I report the renormalization of the nucleon mass as a function of the momentum cutoff, an Euclidean time density correlation function that deals with the short-time nucleon diffusion, and the pion cloud density and momentum distributions. In the two nucleon sector the interaction of two static nucleons at large distances reduces to the one-pion exchange potential, and I fit the low-energy constants of the contact interactions to reproduce the binding energy of the deuteron and two neutrons in finite volumes. I conclude by showing that the method can be readily applied to light-nuclei. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Physics 2018
3

Étude théorique d’un gaz de fermions froids en interaction : aspects dynamiques et effets de polarisation / Theoretical study of ultra-cold Fermi gases in interaction : dynamical aspects and polarization effects

Pantel, Pierre-Alexandre 22 September 2014 (has links)
Les progrès techniques réalisés dans le cadre des expériences sur les gaz de fermions ultrafroids ont engendré une émulation particulièrement importante ces dernières années. En effet, ces dispositifs expérimentaux permettent de produire des systèmes gazeux ≪ à la carte ≫, notamment grâce au phénomène de résonances de Feshbach qui permet de contrôler le signe de la longueur de diffusion a par application d'un champ magnétique extérieur. Il est alors possible de générer aussi bien une interaction attractive (a < 0) que répulsive (a > 0). La résonance de Feshbach en elle-même se trouve en a → ±∞, cette limite correspondant à un régime de fortes corrélations entre les particules. De plus, dans la région où a est positive, des états lies moléculaires (bosoniques car formés de deux fermions) peuvent se former. En-dessous d'une certaine température, une phase superfluide peut alors apparaitre, et une transition de phase continue entre l'état bosonique et l'état fermionique peut être observée (BEC-BCS crossover). En fonction de la position dans le diagramme de phases, les modes collectifs possèderont des caractéristiques (fréquence, amortissement) différentes. En ce sens, ils constituent une sonde de l'état de la matière et une connaissance précise de ces modes est par conséquent très importante. Le travail présenté dans cette thèse comporte une caractérisation détaillée de plusieurs modes collectifs dans la phase normale du système atomique. L'étude repose principalement sur l'équation de Boltzmann, que nous résolvons de deux façons différentes. La première consiste à utiliser une méthode des moments ≪ améliorée ≫ (c'est-à-dire d'ordre supérieur). La seconde est numérique et a nécessité l'écriture d'un programme de simulation permettant l'incorporation de tous les effets de milieu (potentiel de champ moyen et section efficace). Une attention toute particulière a été apportée à la mise en place des simulations afin de reproduire le plus fidèlement possible les conditions expérimentales. Les techniques expérimentales permettent également désormais la création de gaz polarisés. Nous présenterons donc dans ce travail une étude de ces gaz utilisant notre programme de simulation (mise en évidence des différents régimes de collision), puis une étude plus théorique ayant pour principal objectif d'établir le diagramme de phase encore méconnu de ces gaz particuliers, et enfin de proposer une méthode de calcul des effets de milieu, les techniques habituelles utilisées pour les gaz non polarisés n'étant plus valables / Technical progress on ultra-cold Fermi gases experiments induced numerous studies for the last few years. Using these experimental setups, it is effectively possible to generate ultra-cold gases with selected properties, in particular through the Feshbach resonances phenomenon. This allows us to set the sign of the scattering length a using an external magnetic field. It is then possible to have an attractive interaction (a < 0) as well as a repulsive one (a > 0). The Feshbach resonance itself is defined for infinite values of a (positive or negative), which corresponds to a strongly interacting regime. Moreover, when a > 0, molecular bound states (bosonic because they are made with two fermionic atoms) can appear. Thus, below a critical temperature, a superfluid phase can emerge and a crossover can be observed (from the BEC to BCS superfluid states). Depending on the position on the phase diagram, frequency and damping of collective modes will be different. This is why the collective modes are good probes of the system phase. A precise extensive knowledge of their characteristics is thus very important. This thesis presents a complete study of some of these collective modes in the normal phase. This work mainly relies on the Boltzmann equation which will be solved in two different ways: firstly, with an improved (higher order) version of the so-called moments method; secondly with a numerical solution that has required to write a numerical code in order to take into account the in-medium effects (mean field potential and in-medium cross section). Particular attention has been paid to numerical simulations in order to reproduce as closely as possible the experimental conditions. Moreover, experimental procedures now allow to create spin unbalanced gases. We have shown in this work a study of these systems using the numerical resolution of the Boltzmann equation. Moreover, we have developed a theoretical approach in order to build the phase diagram of these polarized gases, which is not fully described yet. Finally, we have suggested a method to determine the in-medium effects, with the aim to solve the problem emerging with the usual method used in the balanced case

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