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Questions tagged [collective-excitations]

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0 votes
1 answer
81 views

How much does quantum uncertainty contribute to the uncertainty of earthquakes?

More abstractly, the topic is: amplification of quantum uncertainty within dynamically unstable systems. I'd like to have a calculable toy model, e.g. maybe a quantum version of the famous "...
Mitchell Porter's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
49 views

Can continuous translation of Wigner crystal be described by charge neutral density excitations?

In a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG), under conditions where electron-electron interactions predominate over kinetic energy contributions, the ground state is a Wigner crystal. This crystalline ...
aj_01100110's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
80 views

Difference between Dicke superradiance and dipole-coupled emitter superradiance

This question is similar to "What causes the collective emission in Dicke Model?", but more specific. I wonder if the situation described in [1] R. H. Dicke – Coherence in Spontaneous ...
A. P.'s user avatar
  • 3,260
0 votes
0 answers
23 views

Visualize sound propagation in molecular dynamics?

I am simulating a simple Lennard-Jones fluid confined between two fixed walls and I am analyzing the autocorrelation function of the velocity along the direction of the confinement (normal to the ...
YoussefMabrouk's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
24 views

Population inversion requirement for multiexcitonic lasing

I am working with optically active nanomaterials (quantum dots, perovskites), that have pretty large exciton binding energies and can form multiexcitonic complexes, e.g. biexcitons, relatively easily. ...
Vadim's user avatar
  • 11
2 votes
2 answers
125 views

Exciton-phonon coupling Hamiltonian

I'm reading this article about coherent exciton transport in photosynthetic light harvesting and the role of quantized vibrations. Along the way, I came across a section where the article claimed the ...
slithy_tove's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
373 views

How do experimentalists measure the exciton binding energy?

The exciton binding energy in semiconductors is determined theoretically by the energetic difference between the fundamental gap and the optical gap or, in other words, as the energetic difference of ...
franz's user avatar
  • 568
2 votes
0 answers
86 views

Para- and ortho-excitons in solids with spin-orbit coupling

The names para- and ortho-exciton stem from the fact that -- in superficial analogy to para- and ortho-hydrogen -- the wave function that forms the electron-hole bound state can either be a singlet ...
franz's user avatar
  • 568
3 votes
0 answers
195 views

Goldstone Modes, Galilean Symmetry, and Negative Excitations in Fermi Gas

Considering the centrality of Goldstone quasiparticles in condensed matter theories, I was wondering if the converse of the theorem might also be true: Does the existence of a gapless excitation imply ...
Deep Blue's user avatar
  • 1,340
5 votes
1 answer
105 views

Exciton nomenclature

In many publications on electronic excitations I stumbled across a categorisation of excitons (electron-hole quasi-particles), namely A- and B-excitons. Could someone please explain the difference ...
franz's user avatar
  • 568
0 votes
1 answer
76 views

Symmetry of momentum distribution in trapped BEC

Is the momentum distribution of excitations in a BEC symmetric? Even if there is a step potential (which I think should not make a difference because this is in real space)? I think yes, because ...
MrQ's user avatar
  • 302
3 votes
0 answers
46 views

Qualitative difference of excitations in Fermi VS Bose superfluids

Assume that we have an electrically neutral interacting gas (or liquid) of Bose or Fermi particles in a superfluid state. For simplicity, assume that the particles interact via an assigned central ...
Quillo's user avatar
  • 5,068
7 votes
4 answers
803 views

Why does the breaking of a 'continuous' symmetry lead to gapless excitations but not that of a discrete symmetry?

Goldstone theorem, especially in the context of condensed matter physics, can be stated as: Whenever there is spontaneous breakdown of a continuous global symmetry, the spectrum of the theory ...
SRS's user avatar
  • 26.7k
1 vote
0 answers
62 views

Features of plasmon and surface plasmon polariton

What is the difference between surface plasmon polariton and plasmon in the Hamiltonian? So let's say that I can diagonalize the Hamiltonian of the system I am studying no matter how complicated that ...
Yepman's user avatar
  • 161
4 votes
1 answer
476 views

What is plasmon really? Is it a charge density wave of electron gas or an EM wave that exists across the metal surface?

Sometimes plasmons are defined as collective plasma oscillations of the free electron gas in a metal. Therefore, plasmons must be a periodic modulation of electron charge density in the metal. But ...
Solidification's user avatar

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