Superfluidity and Superconductivity

Author(s):  
Norman J. Morgenstern Horing

Chapter 13 addresses Bose condensation in superfluids (and superconductors), which involves the field operator ψ‎ having a c-number component (<ψ(x,t)>≠0), challenging number conservation. The nonlinear Gross-Pitaevskii equation is derived for this condensate wave function<ψ>=ψ−ψ˜, facilitating identification of the coherence length and the core region of vortex motion. The noncondensate Green’s function G˜1(1,1′)=−i<(ψ˜(1)ψ˜+(1′))+> and the nonvanishing anomalous correlation function F˜∗(2,1′)=−i<(ψ˜+(2)ψ˜+(1′))+> describe the dynamics and elementary excitations of the non-condensate states and are discussed in conjunction with Landau’s criterion for viscosity. Associated concepts of off-diagonal long-range order and the interpretation of <ψ> as a superfluid order parameter are also introduced. Anderson’s Bose-condensed state, as a phase-coherent wave packet superposition of number states, resolves issues of number conservation. Superconductivity involves bound Cooper pairs of electrons capable of Bose condensation and superfluid behavior. Correspondingly, the two-particle Green’s function has a term involving a product of anomalous bound-Cooper-pair condensate wave functions of the type F(1,2)=−i<(ψ(1)ψ(2))+>≠0, such that G2(1,2;1′,2′)=F(1,2)F+(1′,2′)+G˜2(1,2;1′,2′). Here, G˜2 describes the dynamics/excitations of the non-superfluid-condensate states, while nonvanishing F,F+ represent a phase-coherent wave packet superposition of Cooper-pair number states and off-diagonal long range order. Employing this form of G2 in the G1-equation couples the condensed state with the non-condensate excitations. Taken jointly with the dynamical equation for F(1,2), this leads to the Gorkov equations, encompassing the Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer (BCS) energy gap, critical temperature, and Bogoliubov-de Gennes eigenfunction Bogoliubons. Superconductor thermodynamics and critical magnetic field are discussed. For a weak magnetic field, the Gorkov-equations lead to Ginzburg–Landau theory and a nonlinear Schrödinger-like equation for the pair wave function and the associated supercurrent, along with identification of the Cooper pair density. Furthermore, Chapter 13 addresses the apparent lack of gauge invariance of London theory with an elegant variational analysis involving re-gauging the potentials, yielding a manifestly gauge invariant generalization of the London equation. Consistency with the equation of continuity implies the existence of Anderson’s acoustic normal mode, which is supplanted by the plasmon for Coulomb interaction. Type II superconductors and the penetration (and interaction) of quantized magnetic flux lines are also discussed. Finally, Chapter 13 addresses Josephson tunneling between superconductors.

1987 ◽  
Vol 35 (13) ◽  
pp. 7157-7160 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Dekker ◽  
A. F. M. Arts ◽  
H. W. de Wijn ◽  
J. K. Kjems

The method of the previous paper is applied to a two-dimensional model of an antiferromagnetic. An alternative notation is developed, and this shows that in the absence of a magnetic field the antiferromagnetic is effectively identical with the ferromagnetic, a result first demonstrated by Kramers & Wannier (1941). In the presence of a magnetic field a number of terms of a series expansion are obtained, and these are used in conjunction with the corresponding high-temperature ferromagnetic expansions to derive a number of qualitative features of an antiferromagnetic. High- and low-temperature series for the magnetic susceptibility in zero field are deduced, and the results are compared with standard approximations. The theory of order-disorder transitions with constituent ratios differing from unity is discussed, and it is shown that for concentrations of one constituent less than 0.226 no long-range order can exist, and there is no singularity. The application of the results to adsorption theory is discussed. The method of Ashkin & Lamb (1943) is generalized to derive a series for long-range order when the constituent ratio differs from unity.


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