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Rutgers researchers 'rewrite the book' in quantum statistical physics
February 10, 2006
An important part of the decades-old assumption thought to be essential for quantum statistical physics is being challenged by researchers at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, and colleagues in Germany and Italy. In a journal article to be published in Physical Review Letters and now available online, the researchers show that it is not necessary to assume that large collections of atomic particles are in a random state in order to derive a mathematical formula that conveys that smaller collections of those particles are indeed random. While their proof is unlikely to change any of today's high-tech products and processes, it could nonetheless lead to rewrites of tomorrow's physics textbooks.
For decades, physicists believed that an assumption of randomness accounts for the canonical distribution formula at the heart of statistical mechanics, a field that helps scientists understand the structure and properties of materials. Randomness remains a necessary foundation to derive this formula for systems governed by the principles of classical mechanics. But the basic constituents of materials reside at the atomic and subatomic levels, where the principles of quantum mechanics take hold. The researchers have found that for quantum systems the situation is quite different than physicists had believed.
"What we have found is so simple that it is surprising that it was not discovered long ago," said Sheldon Goldstein, professor of mathematics and physics at Rutgers and one of the paper's four authors. "More surprising still is the fact that Erwin Schroedinger, one of the founders of quantum mechanics, had the essential idea more than fifty years ago, and this was entirely unappreciated."
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
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A Guide to Physics Problems: Part 2: Thermodynamics, Statistical Physics, and Quantum Mechanics (The Language of Science) (Pt. 2)
by Sidney B. Cahn (Author), Gerald D. Mahan (Author), Boris E. Nadgorny (Author), Max Dresden (Foreword)
A Guide to Physics Problems is a two-volume set of problems taken from Ph.D. qualifying exams. Part 2 -- the companion to Part 1: Mechanics, Relativity, and Electrodynamics (Plenum 1994) -- features 182 challenging problems with detailed solutions, textbook references, clear illustrations, and an easy-to-use layout.
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Fundamental University Physics: Quantum and Statistical Physics Volume III
by Marcelo, Edward J. Finn Alonso (Author)
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Fundamental University Physics (3 Volumes) I Mechanics- Ii Fields and Waves- III Quantum and Statistical Physics.
by and Edward Finn; Alonso Marcelo (Author)
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Supersymmetric Methods in Quantum and Statistical Physics (Texts and Monographs in Physics)
by Georg Junker (Author)
This book gives an introduction to supersymmetric quantum mechanics and a comprehensive review of its applications in quantum and statistical physics. The classical version and the quantum version of Witten's model are studied in detail. Exact spectral properties of the model for the so-called shape invariant potentials are discussed. The quasi-classical quantization rules are derived. The topics covered also include the supersymmetric structure of a classical stochastic dynamical system obeying the Langevin or the Fokker-Planck equation, Pauli's Hamiltonian and its application to the paragmagnetism of a non-interacting electron gas in two and three dimensions, supersymmetry of Dirac's Hamiltonian, and others. The book addresses graduate students as well as scientists.
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Ideas and Methods in Quantum and Statistical Physics: Volume 2: In Memory of Raphael Høegh-Krohn (1938-1988)
by Sergio Albeverio (Editor), Helge Holden (Editor), Jens Erik Fenstad (Editor), Tom Lindstrom (Editor)
These volumes contain a collection of essays by many of the closest co-workers of Raphael Hoegh-Krohn (1938-1988), one of the outstanding mathematical physicists of our age. The contributions vary in style, purpose, and content--some are surveys that summarize and clarify a subject area, others are new and adventurous expeditions into unknown territory. The topics cover most aspects of modern mathematical physics with special emphasis on methods from operator theory and stochastic analysis. Volume 1 contains papers on mathematical analysis (both linear and nonlinear), stochastics, and applications. Volume 2 discusses mathematical problems in quantum and statistical physics.
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Quantum and statistical physics (Fundamental university physics)
by Marcelo Alonso (Author)
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Low-Dimensional Models in Statistical Physics and Quantum Field Theory: Proceedings of the 34. Internationale Universitatswochen Fur Kern- Und Teilchenphysik ... March 4-11, 1995 (Lecture Notes in Physics)
by Harald Grosse (Editor), Ludwig Pittner (Editor)
This book contains thoroughly written reviews of modern developments in low-dimensional modelling of statistical mechanics and quantum systems. It addresses students as well as researchers. The main items can be grouped into integrable (quantum) spin systems, which lead in the continuum limit to (conformal invariant) quantum field theory models and their algebraic structures, ranging from the Yang-Baxter equation and quantum groups to noncommutative geometry.
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Contemporary Physics and the Limits of Knowledge (Exploring Symmetry, Special and General Relativity, Statistical Physics, Quantum Mechanics and Chaos)
by Morton Tavel (Author)
Morton Tavel contends that every one of the six topics that he explores - symmetry, special and general relativity, statistical physics, quantum mechanics, and chaos - has played a role in telling us what we are unable to know about the physical world. He explains what each of the topics reveals about our attempts to pinpoint reality, and how each scientific revelation forces us to acknowledge a narrowing rather than a broadening of our knowledge. Tavel emphasizes the features of physics that make it a very human endeavor and serve to build bridges to all other intellectual disciplines. Contemporary Physics and the Limits of Knowledge is guaranteed to enlighten and delight nonscience majors.
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Models in Statistical Physics and Quantum Field Theory (Trieste Notes in Physics)
by Harald Grosse (Author)
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Exact Methods in Low-dimensional Statistical Physics and Quantum Computing: Lecture Notes of the Les Houches Summer School: Volume 89, July 2008
by Jesper Jacobsen (Author), Stephane Ouvry (Author), Vincent Pasquier (Author), Didina Serban (Author), Leticia Cugliandolo (Author)
Recent years have shown important and spectacular convergences between techniques traditionally used in theoretical physics and methods emerging from modern mathematics (combinatorics, probability theory, topology, algebraic geometry, etc). These techniques, and in particular those of low-dimensional statistical models, are instrumental in improving our understanding of emerging fields, such as quantum computing and cryptography, complex systems, and quantum fluids. This book sets these issues into a larger and more coherent theoretical context than is currently available. For instance, understanding the key concepts of quantum entanglement (a measure of information density) necessitates a thorough knowledge of quantum and topological field theory, and integrable models. To achieve this...
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