7 resultados para Fermi-Coulomb correlations
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
General Relativity is one of the greatest scientific achievementes of the 20th century along with quantum theory. These two theories are extremely beautiful and they are well verified by experiments, but they are apparently incompatible. Hints towards understanding these problems can be derived studying Black Holes, some the most puzzling solutions of General Relativity. The main topic of this Master Thesis is the study of Black Holes, in particular the Physics of Hawking Radiation. After a short review of General Relativity, I study in detail the Schwarzschild solution with particular emphasis on the coordinates systems used and the mathematical proof of the classical laws of Black Hole "Thermodynamics". Then I introduce the theory of Quantum Fields in Curved Spacetime, from Bogolubov transformations to the Schwinger-De Witt expansion, useful for the renormalization of the stress energy tensor. After that I introduce a 2D model of gravitational collapse to study the Hawking radiation phenomenon. Particular emphasis is given to the analysis of the quantum states, from correlations to the physical implication of this quantum effect (e.g. Information Paradox, Black Hole Thermodynamics). Then I introduce the renormalized stress energy tensor. Using the Schwinger-De Witt expansion I renormalize this object and I compute it analytically in the various quantum states of interest. Moreover, I study the correlations between these objects. They are interesting because they are linked to the Hawking radiation experimental search in acoustic Black Hole models. In particular I find that there is a characteristic peak in correlations between points inside and outside the Black Hole region, which correpsonds to entangled excitations inside and outside the Black Hole. These peaks hopefully will be measurable soon in supersonic BEC.
Resumo:
Il crescente utilizzo di sistemi di analisi high-throughput per lo studio dello stato fisiologico e metabolico del corpo, ha evidenziato che una corretta alimentazione e una buona forma fisica siano fattori chiave per la salute. L'aumento dell'età media della popolazione evidenzia l'importanza delle strategie di contrasto delle patologie legate all'invecchiamento. Una dieta sana è il primo mezzo di prevenzione per molte patologie, pertanto capire come il cibo influisce sul corpo umano è di fondamentale importanza. In questo lavoro di tesi abbiamo affrontato la caratterizzazione dei sistemi di imaging radiografico Dual-energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA). Dopo aver stabilito una metodologia adatta per l'elaborazione di dati DXA su un gruppo di soggetti sani non obesi, la PCA ha evidenziato alcune proprietà emergenti dall'interpretazione delle componenti principali in termini delle variabili di composizione corporea restituite dalla DXA. Le prime componenti sono associabili ad indici macroscopici di descrizione corporea (come BMI e WHR). Queste componenti sono sorprendentemente stabili al variare dello status dei soggetti in età, sesso e nazionalità. Dati di analisi metabolica, ottenuti tramite Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) su campioni di urina, sono disponibili per circa mille anziani (provenienti da cinque paesi europei) di età compresa tra i 65 ed i 79 anni, non affetti da patologie gravi. I dati di composizione corporea sono altresì presenti per questi soggetti. L'algoritmo di Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) è stato utilizzato per esprimere gli spettri MRS come combinazione di fattori di base interpretabili come singoli metaboliti. I fattori trovati sono stabili, quindi spettri metabolici di soggetti sono composti dallo stesso pattern di metaboliti indipendentemente dalla nazionalità. Attraverso un'analisi a singolo cieco sono stati trovati alti valori di correlazione tra le variabili di composizione corporea e lo stato metabolico dei soggetti. Ciò suggerisce la possibilità di derivare la composizione corporea dei soggetti a partire dal loro stato metabolico.
Resumo:
The study of ultra-cold atomic gases is one of the most active field in contemporary physics. The main motivation for the interest in this field consists in the possibility to use ultracold gases to simulate in a controlled way quantum many-body systems of relevance to other fields of physics, or to create novel quantum systems with unusual physical properties. An example of the latter are Bose-Fermi mixtures with a tunable pairing interaction between bosons and fermions. In this work, we study with many-body diagrammatic methods the properties of this kind of mixture in two spatial dimensions, extending previous work for three dimensional Bose-Fermi mixtures. At zero temperature, we focus specifically on the competition between boson condensation and the pairing of bosons and fermions into molecules. By a numerical solution of the main equations resulting by our many-body diagrammatic formalism, we calculate and present results for several thermodynamic quantities of interest. Differences and similarities between the two-dimensional and three-dimensional cases are pointed out. Finally, our new results are applied to discuss a recent proposal for creating a p-wave superfluid in Bose-Fermi mixtures with the fermionic molecules which form for sufficiently strong Bose-Fermi attraction.
Resumo:
Ultracold dilute gases occupy an important role in modern physics and they are employed to verify fundamental quantum theories in most branches of theoretical physics. The scope of this thesis work is the study of Bose-Fermi (BF) mixtures at zero temperature with a tunable pairing between bosons and fermions. The mixtures are treated with diagrammatic quantum many-body methods based on the so-called T-matrix formalism. Starting from the Fermi-polaron limit, I will explore various values of relative concentrations up to mixtures with a majority of bosons, a case barely considered in previous works. An unexpected quantum phase transition is found to occur in a certain range of BF coupling for mixture with a slight majority of bosons. The mechanical stability of mixtures has been analysed, when the boson-fermion interaction is changed from weak to strong values, in the light of experimental results recently obtained for a double-degenerate Bose-Fermi mixture of 23 Na - 40 K. A possible improvement in the description of the boson-boson repulsion based on Popov's theory is proposed. Finally, the effects of a harmonic trapping potential are described, with a comparison with the experimental data for the condensate fraction recently obtained for a trapped 23 Na - 40 K mixture.
Resumo:
The aim of this thesis is the study of the normal phase of a mass imbalanced and polarized ultra-cold Fermi gas in the context of the BCS-BEC crossover, using a diagrammatic approach known as t-matrix approximation. More specifically, the calculations are implemented using the fully self-consistent t-matrix (or Luttinger- Ward) approach, which is already experimentally and numerically validated for the balanced case. An imbalance (polarization) between the two spin populations works against pairing and superfluidity. For sufficiently large polarization (and not too strong attraction) the system remains in the normal phase even at zero temperature. This phase is expected to be well described by the Landau’s Fermi liquid theory. By reducing the spin polarization, a critical imbalance is reached where a quantum phase transition towards a superfluid phase occurs and the Fermi liquid description breaks down. Depending on the strength of the interaction, the exotic superfluid phase at the quantum critical point (QCP) can be either a FFLO phase (Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov) or a Sarma phase. In this regard, the presence of mass imbalance can strongly influence the nature of the QCP, by favouring one of these two exotic types of pairing over the other, depending on whether the majority of the two species is heavier or lighter than the minority. The analysis of the system is made by focusing on the temperature-coupling-polarization phase diagram for different mass ratios of the two components and on the study of different thermodynamic quantities at finite temperature. The evolution towards a non-Fermi liquid behavior at the QCP is investigated by calculating the fermionic quasi-particle residues, the effective masses and the self-energies at zero temperature.
Resumo:
The object of study of the present work are Bose-Fermi mixtures in three dimensions at zero temperature. The system is characterized by a great tunability of physical parameters that is achieved by means of a Fano-Feshbach resonance. As a result, there are mainly two regimes: we move from a situation in which bosons and fermions are weakly interacting to a context in which bosons are coupled to fermions so as to form molecules that are composite fermions, as the coupling between the two types of particles is increased. In the former case, we can describe the mixture as a weakly attractive Bose-Fermi one, while in the latter the same is described in terms of molecules and excess atoms or particles which are unpaired. The main aim of the thesis is to analyze the spectral weight functions which represent the single-particle excitation spectra of the system and are relevant to recent radio-frequency spectroscopy experiments of the system. In order to pursue this objective, diagrammatic methods are used. The formalism is developed within the T-matrix approach: it consists of an approximate calculation whichselects exclusively the class of Feynman’s diagrams that collects all possible repeated boson-fermion interaction.
Resumo:
Ultracold gases provide an ideal platform for quantum simulations of many-body systems. Here we are interested in a particular system which has been the focus of most experimental and theoretical works on ultracold fermionic gases: the unitary Fermi gas. In this work we study with Quantum Monte Carlo simulations a two-component gas of fermionic atoms at zero temperature in the unitary regime. Specifically, we are interested in studying how the effective masses for the quasi-particles of the two components of the Fermi liquid evolve as the polarization is progressively reduced from full to lower values. A recent theoretical work, based on alternative diagrammatic methods, has indeed suggested that such effective masses should diverge at a critical polarization. To independently verify such predictions, we perform Variational Monte Carlo (VMC) calculations of the energy based on Jastrow-Slater wavefunctions after adding or subtracting a particle with a given momentum to a full Fermi sphere. In this way, we determine the quasi-particle dispersions, from which we extract the effective masses for different polarizations. The resulting effective masses turn out to be quite close to the non-interacting values, even though some evidence of an increase for the effective mass of the minority component appears close to the predicted value for the critical polarization. Preliminary results obtained for the majority component with the Fixed-node Diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) method seem to indicate that DMC could lead to an increase of the effective masses in comparison with the VMC results. Finally, we point out further improvements of the trial wave-function and boundary conditions that would be necessary in future simulations to draw definite conclusions on the effective masses of the polarized unitary Fermi gas.