New physical concepts: Fermionic Exchange Force and Bose-Einstein Force
ORAL
Abstract
The particle-exchange symmetry has a strong influence on the behavior and the properties of systems of N identical particles. While fermionic occupation numbers are restricted according to Pauli's exclusion principle, 0 ≦ nk ≦ 1, bosonic occupation numbers can take arbitrary values 0 ≦ nk ≦ N. It is also a matter of fact, however, that occupation numbers in realistic systems of interacting fermions and bosons can never attain the maximal possible value, i.e., 1 and N, respectively. By resorting to one-particle reduced density matrix functional theory we provide an explanation for this [1,2]: The gradient of the exact functional diverges repulsively whenever an occupation number nk tends to attain the maximal value. In that sense we provide in particular a fundamental and quantitative explanation for the absence of complete Bose-Einstein condensation (as characterized by nk=N) in nature [2]. These new concepts are universal in the sense that the fermionic exchange force and the Bose-Einstein force are present in all systems regardless of the particle number N, the spatial dimensionality and the interaction potentials.
[1] C.Schilling, R.Schilling, Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 013001 (2019)
[2] J.Liebert, C.Schilling, arXiv:2010.06634 (2020)
[1] C.Schilling, R.Schilling, Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 013001 (2019)
[2] J.Liebert, C.Schilling, arXiv:2010.06634 (2020)
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Presenters
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Christian Schilling
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Munich, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Authors
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Christian Schilling
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Munich, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
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Carlos Benavides-Riveros
MPI PKS Dresden, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
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Julia Liebert
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Munich
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Rolf Schilling
University of Mainz