PHY6937: Difference between revisions
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<math>\Delta^*\rightarrow \Delta^*+g\psi^\dagger_\downarrow\psi^\dagger_\uparrow</math> | <math>\Delta^*\rightarrow \Delta^*+g\psi^\dagger_\downarrow\psi^\dagger_\uparrow</math> | ||
Then, <math>S_\Delta=-\int_0^\beta d\tau \sum_{\vec{r}}{\frac{1}{g}\Delta^*\Delta + \Delta^*\psi_\uparrow \psi_\downarrow \Delta\psi^\dagger_\downarrow \psi^\dagger_\uparrow+g\psi^\dagger_\downarrow \psi^\dagger_\uparrow \psi_\uparrow \psi_\downarrow}</math> | Then, <math>S_\Delta=-\int_0^\beta d\tau \sum_{\vec{r}}{\{\frac{1}{g}\Delta^*\Delta + \Delta^*\psi_\uparrow \psi_\downarrow \Delta\psi^\dagger_\downarrow \psi^\dagger_\uparrow+g\psi^\dagger_\downarrow \psi^\dagger_\uparrow \psi_\uparrow \psi_\downarrow}\}</math> | ||
== Microscopic derivation of the Giznburg-Landau functional == | == Microscopic derivation of the Giznburg-Landau functional == | ||
=== Little Parks experiment === | === Little Parks experiment === |
Revision as of 18:36, 7 February 2011
Welcome to Phy 6937 Superconductivity and superfluidity
PHY6937 is a one semester advanced graduate level course. Its aim is to introduce concepts and theoretical techniques for the description of superconductors and superfluids. This course is a natural continuation of the "many-body" course PHY5670 and will build on the logical framework introduced therein, i.e. broken symmetry and adiabatic continuity. The course will cover a range of topics, such as the connection between the phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau and the microscpic BCS theory, Migdal-Eliashberg treatment of phonon mediated superconductivity, unconventional superconductivity, superfluidity in He-4 and He-3, and Kosterlitz-Thouless theory of two dimensional superfluids.
The key component of the course is the collaborative student contribution to the course Wiki-textbook. Each team of students is responsible for BOTH writing the assigned chapter AND editing chapters of others.
Team assignments: Spring 2011 student teams
Outline of the course:
Pairing Hamiltonian and BCS instability
We can write the Hamiltonian of the system as:
in which, and
For this system, the partition function is:
where, Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle S_{BCS}=\int_0^\beta d\tau \sum_\vec{r}[\psi_\sigma^\dagger (\tau, \vec{r})(\partial _\tau+\epsilon_\vec{p}-\mu)\psi_\sigma^\dagger (\vec{r}) +g\psi_\uparrow^\dagger (\vec{r})\psi_\downarrow^\dagger (\vec{r})\psi_\downarrow (\vec{r})\psi_\uparrow (\vec{r})]}
It doesn't matter to multiply partition function by a constant:
Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle Z\rightarrow Z=\int D[\psi_\sigma ^{*} (\tau, \vec{r}), \psi_\sigma (\tau, \vec{r})] D[\Delta^{*}(\tau, \vec{r}),\Delta (\tau, \vec{r})] e^{-S_{BCS}-S_{\Delta}}}
where,
Here, we need to pay attention: and are grassmann numbers. and are constant. and behave like constant.
Let's make a shift of the constant:
Then,