Lieb–Liniger model: Difference between revisions

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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
The '''Lieb–Liniger model''' describes a gas of particles moving in one dimension and satisfying [[Bose–Einstein statistics]].


{{Copyvio |fullpage=yes |timestamp=20240411150753 |url=http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Lieb-Liniger_model_of_a_Bose_Gas}}
{{Copyvio |fullpage=yes |timestamp=20240411150753 |url=http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Lieb-Liniger_model_of_a_Bose_Gas}}
The '''Lieb–Liniger model''' describes a gas of particles moving in one dimension and satisfying [[Bose–Einstein statistics]].


==Introduction==
==Introduction==
A model of a gas of particles moving in one dimension and satisfying [[Bose–Einstein statistics]] was introduced in 1963 <ref name="ll63">Elliott H. Lieb and Werner Liniger, ''Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. I. The General Solution and the Ground State'', Physical Review 130: 1605–1616, 1963</ref><ref name="l63">Elliott H. Lieb, ''Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. II. The Excitation Spectrum'', Physical Review 130:1616–1624,1963</ref> in order to study whether the available approximate theories of such gases, specifically Bogoliubov's theory, would conform to the actual properties of the model gas. The model is based on a well defined Schrödinger Hamiltonian for particles interacting with each other via a two-body potential, and all the eigenfunctions and eigenvalues of this Hamiltonian can, in principle, be calculated exactly. Sometimes it is called one dimensional [[Bose gas]] with delta interaction. It also can be considered as quantum [[non-linear Schrödinger equation]].
A model of a gas of particles moving in one dimension and satisfying [[Bose–Einstein statistics]] was introduced in 1963 <ref name="ll63">Elliott H. Lieb and Werner Liniger, ''Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. I. The General Solution and the Ground State'', Physical Review 130: 1605–1616, 1963</ref><ref name="l63">Elliott H. Lieb, ''Exact Analysis of an Interacting Bose Gas. II. The Excitation Spectrum'', Physical Review 130:1616–1624,1963</ref> in order to study whether the available approximate theories of such gases, specifically Bogoliubov's theory, would conform to the actual properties of the model gas. The model is based on a well defined Schrödinger Hamiltonian for particles interacting with each other via a two-body potential, and all the eigenfunctions and eigenvalues of this Hamiltonian can, in principle, be calculated exactly. Sometimes it is called one dimensional [[Bose gas]] with delta interaction. It also can be considered as quantum [[non-linear Schrödinger equation]].

Latest revision as of 09:40, 25 April 2024