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Quasiparticle

In condensed matter physics, a quasiparticle is a concept used to describe a collective behavior of a group of particles that can be treated as if they were a single particle. Formally, quasiparticles and collective excitations are closely related phenomena that arise when a microscopically complicated system such as a solid behaves as if it contained different weakly interacting particles in vacuum.

For example, as an electron travels through a semiconductor, its motion is disturbed in a complex way by its interactions with other electrons and with atomic nuclei. The electron behaves as though it has a different effective mass travelling unperturbed in vacuum. Such an electron is called an electron quasiparticle.[1] In another example, the aggregate motion of electrons in the valence band of a semiconductor or a hole band in a metal[2] behave as though the material instead contained positively charged quasiparticles called electron holes. Other quasiparticles or collective excitations include the phonon, a quasiparticle derived from the vibrations of atoms in a solid, and the plasmons, a particle derived from plasma oscillation.

These phenomena are typically called quasiparticles if they are related to fermions, and called collective excitations if they are related to bosons,[1] although the precise distinction is not universally agreed upon.[3] Thus, electrons and electron holes (fermions) are typically called quasiparticles, while phonons and plasmons (bosons) are typically called collective excitations.

The quasiparticle concept is important in condensed matter physics because it can simplify the many-body problem in quantum mechanics. The theory of quasiparticles was started by the Soviet physicist Lev Landau in the 1930s.[4][5]

Overview edit

General introduction edit

Solids are made of only three kinds of particles: electrons, protons, and neutrons. None of these are quasiparticles; instead a quasiparticle is an emergent phenomenon that occurs inside the solid. Therefore, while it is quite possible to have a single particle (electron, proton, or neutron) floating in space, a quasiparticle can only exist inside interacting many-particle systems such as solids.

Motion in a solid is extremely complicated: Each electron and proton is pushed and pulled (by Coulomb's law) by all the other electrons and protons in the solid (which may themselves be in motion). It is these strong interactions that make it very difficult to predict and understand the behavior of solids (see many-body problem). On the other hand, the motion of a non-interacting classical particle is relatively simple; it would move in a straight line at constant velocity. This is the motivation for the concept of quasiparticles: The complicated motion of the real particles in a solid can be mathematically transformed into the much simpler motion of imagined quasiparticles, which behave more like non-interacting particles.

In summary, quasiparticles are a mathematical tool for simplifying the description of solids.

Relation to many-body quantum mechanics edit

 
Any system, no matter how complicated, has a ground state along with an infinite series of higher-energy excited states.

The principal motivation for quasiparticles is that it is almost impossible to directly describe every particle in a macroscopic system. For example, a barely-visible (0.1mm) grain of sand contains around 1017 nuclei and 1018 electrons. Each of these attracts or repels every other by Coulomb's law. In principle, the Schrödinger equation predicts exactly how this system will behave. But the Schrödinger equation in this case is a partial differential equation (PDE) on a 3×1018-dimensional vector space—one dimension for each coordinate (x,y,z) of each particle. Directly and straightforwardly trying to solve such a PDE is impossible in practice. Solving a PDE on a 2-dimensional space is typically much harder than solving a PDE on a 1-dimensional space (whether analytically or numerically); solving a PDE on a 3-dimensional space is significantly harder still; and thus solving a PDE on a 3×1018-dimensional space is quite impossible by straightforward methods.

One simplifying factor is that the system as a whole, like any quantum system, has a ground state and various excited states with higher and higher energy above the ground state. In many contexts, only the "low-lying" excited states, with energy reasonably close to the ground state, are relevant. This occurs because of the Boltzmann distribution, which implies that very-high-energy thermal fluctuations are unlikely to occur at any given temperature.

Quasiparticles and collective excitations are a type of low-lying excited state. For example, a crystal at absolute zero is in the ground state, but if one phonon is added to the crystal (in other words, if the crystal is made to vibrate slightly at a particular frequency) then the crystal is now in a low-lying excited state. The single phonon is called an elementary excitation. More generally, low-lying excited states may contain any number of elementary excitations (for example, many phonons, along with other quasiparticles and collective excitations).[6]

When the material is characterized as having "several elementary excitations", this statement presupposes that the different excitations can be combined. In other words, it presupposes that the excitations can coexist simultaneously and independently. This is never exactly true. For example, a solid with two identical phonons does not have exactly twice the excitation energy of a solid with just one phonon, because the crystal vibration is slightly anharmonic. However, in many materials, the elementary excitations are very close to being independent. Therefore, as a starting point, they are treated as free, independent entities, and then corrections are included via interactions between the elementary excitations, such as "phonon-phonon scattering".

Therefore, using quasiparticles / collective excitations, instead of analyzing 1018 particles, one needs to deal with only a handful of somewhat-independent elementary excitations. It is, therefore, a very effective approach to simplify the many-body problem in quantum mechanics. This approach is not useful for all systems, however. For example, in strongly correlated materials, the elementary excitations are so far from being independent that it is not even useful as a starting point to treat them as independent.

Distinction between quasiparticles and collective excitations edit

Usually, an elementary excitation is called a "quasiparticle" if it is a fermion and a "collective excitation" if it is a boson.[1] However, the precise distinction is not universally agreed upon.[3]

There is a difference in the way that quasiparticles and collective excitations are intuitively envisioned.[3] A quasiparticle is usually thought of as being like a dressed particle: it is built around a real particle at its "core", but the behavior of the particle is affected by the environment. A standard example is the "electron quasiparticle": an electron in a crystal behaves as if it had an effective mass which differs from its real mass. On the other hand, a collective excitation is usually imagined to be a reflection of the aggregate behavior of the system, with no single real particle at its "core". A standard example is the phonon, which characterizes the vibrational motion of every atom in the crystal.

However, these two visualizations leave some ambiguity. For example, a magnon in a ferromagnet can be considered in one of two perfectly equivalent ways: (a) as a mobile defect (a misdirected spin) in a perfect alignment of magnetic moments or (b) as a quantum of a collective spin wave that involves the precession of many spins. In the first case, the magnon is envisioned as a quasiparticle, in the second case, as a collective excitation. However, both (a) and (b) are equivalent and correct descriptions. As this example shows, the intuitive distinction between a quasiparticle and a collective excitation is not particularly important or fundamental.

The problems arising from the collective nature of quasiparticles have also been discussed within the philosophy of science, notably in relation to the identity conditions of quasiparticles and whether they should be considered "real" by the standards of, for example, entity realism.[7][8]

Effect on bulk properties edit

By investigating the properties of individual quasiparticles, it is possible to obtain a great deal of information about low-energy systems, including the flow properties and heat capacity.

In the heat capacity example, a crystal can store energy by forming phonons, and/or forming excitons, and/or forming plasmons, etc. Each of these is a separate contribution to the overall heat capacity.

History edit

The idea of quasiparticles originated in Lev Landau's theory of Fermi liquids, which was originally invented for studying liquid helium-3. For these systems a strong similarity exists between the notion of quasiparticle and dressed particles in quantum field theory. The dynamics of Landau's theory is defined by a kinetic equation of the mean-field type. A similar equation, the Vlasov equation, is valid for a plasma in the so-called plasma approximation. In the plasma approximation, charged particles are considered to be moving in the electromagnetic field collectively generated by all other particles, and hard collisions between the charged particles are neglected. When a kinetic equation of the mean-field type is a valid first-order description of a system, second-order corrections determine the entropy production, and generally take the form of a Boltzmann-type collision term, in which figure only "far collisions" between virtual particles. In other words, every type of mean-field kinetic equation, and in fact every mean-field theory, involves a quasiparticle concept.

Examples of quasiparticles and collective excitations edit

This section contains examples of quasiparticles and collective excitations. The first subsection below contains common ones that occur in a wide variety of materials under ordinary conditions; the second subsection contains examples that arise only in special contexts.

More common examples edit

  • In solids, an electron quasiparticle is an electron as affected by the other forces and interactions in the solid. The electron quasiparticle has the same charge and spin as a "normal" (elementary particle) electron, and like a normal electron, it is a fermion. However, its mass can differ substantially from that of a normal electron; see the article effective mass.[1] Its electric field is also modified, as a result of electric field screening. In many other respects, especially in metals under ordinary conditions, these so-called Landau quasiparticles[citation needed] closely resemble familiar electrons; as Crommie's "quantum corral" showed, an STM can clearly image their interference upon scattering.
  • A hole is a quasiparticle consisting of the lack of an electron in a state; it is most commonly used in the context of empty states in the valence band of a semiconductor.[1] A hole has the opposite charge of an electron.
  • A phonon is a collective excitation associated with the vibration of atoms in a rigid crystal structure. It is a quantum of a sound wave.
  • A magnon is a collective excitation[1] associated with the electrons' spin structure in a crystal lattice. It is a quantum of a spin wave.
  • In materials, a photon quasiparticle is a photon as affected by its interactions with the material. In particular, the photon quasiparticle has a modified relation between wavelength and energy (dispersion relation), as described by the material's index of refraction. It may also be termed a polariton, especially near a resonance of the material. For example, an exciton-polariton is a superposition of an exciton and a photon; a phonon-polariton is a superposition of a phonon and a photon.
  • A plasmon is a collective excitation, which is the quantum of plasma oscillations (wherein all the electrons simultaneously oscillate with respect to all the ions).
  • A polaron is a quasiparticle which comes about when an electron interacts with the polarization of its surrounding ions.
  • An exciton is an electron and hole bound together.
  • A plasmariton is a coupled optical phonon and dressed photon consisting of a plasmon and photon.

More specialized examples edit

  • A roton is a collective excitation associated with the rotation of a fluid (often a superfluid). It is a quantum of a vortex.
  • Composite fermions arise in a two-dimensional system subject to a large magnetic field, most famously those systems that exhibit the fractional quantum Hall effect.[9] These quasiparticles are quite unlike normal particles in two ways. First, their charge can be less than the electron charge e. In fact, they have been observed with charges of e/3, e/4, e/5, and e/7.[10] Second, they can be anyons, an exotic type of particle that is neither a fermion nor boson.[11]
  • Stoner excitations in ferromagnetic metals
  • Bogoliubov quasiparticles in superconductors. Superconductivity is carried by Cooper pairs—usually described as pairs of electrons—that move through the crystal lattice without resistance. A broken Cooper pair is called a Bogoliubov quasiparticle.[12] It differs from the conventional quasiparticle in metal because it combines the properties of a negatively charged electron and a positively charged hole (an electron void). Physical objects like impurity atoms, from which quasiparticles scatter in an ordinary metal, only weakly affect the energy of a Cooper pair in a conventional superconductor. In conventional superconductors, interference between Bogoliubov quasiparticles is tough for an STM to see. Because of their complex global electronic structures, however, high-Tc cuprate superconductors are another matter. Thus Davis and his colleagues were able to resolve distinctive patterns of quasiparticle interference in Bi-2212.[13]
  • A Majorana fermion is a particle which equals its own antiparticle, and can emerge as a quasiparticle in certain superconductors, or in a quantum spin liquid.[14]
  • Magnetic monopoles arise in condensed matter systems such as spin ice and carry an effective magnetic charge as well as being endowed with other typical quasiparticle properties such as an effective mass. They may be formed through spin flips in frustrated pyrochlore ferromagnets and interact through a Coulomb potential.
  • Skyrmions and Hopfions
  • Spinon is represented by quasiparticle produced as a result of electron spin-charge separation, and can form both quantum spin liquid and strongly correlated quantum spin liquid in some minerals like Herbertsmithite.[15]
  • Angulons can be used to describe the rotation of molecules in solvents. First postulated theoretically in 2015,[16] the existence of the angulon was confirmed in February 2017, after a series of experiments spanning 20 years. Heavy and light species of molecules were found to rotate inside superfluid helium droplets, in good agreement with the angulon theory.[17][18]
  • Type-II Weyl fermions break Lorentz symmetry, the foundation of the special theory of relativity, which cannot be broken by real particles.[19]
  • A dislon is a quantized field associated with the quantization of the lattice displacement field of a crystal dislocation. It is a quantum of vibration and static strain field of a dislocation line.[20]
  • Hydrodynamic pair (or duon) is a quasiparticle made of two particles coupled by hydrodynamic forces. These classical quasiparticles were observed as the elementary excitations in a 2D colloidal crystal driven by viscous flow.[21] The pairs are stabilized because the forces the particles exert on each other are of the same magnitude and direction (in contrast to momentum-conserving forces which are opposite by Newton's 3rd law). The resulting pairs ("duons") are zero-frequency excitations that emerge at the Dirac cones of the crystal's spectrum.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Efthimios Kaxiras (9 January 2003). Atomic and Electronic Structure of Solids. Cambridge University Press. pp. 65–69. ISBN 978-0-521-52339-4.
  2. ^ Ashcroft and Mermin (1976). Solid State Physics (1st ed.). Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. pp. 299–302. ISBN 978-0030839931.
  3. ^ a b c A guide to Feynman diagrams in the many-body problem, by Richard D. Mattuck, p10. "As we have seen, the quasiparticle consists of the original real, individual particle, plus a cloud of disturbed neighbors. It behaves very much like an individual particle, except that it has an effective mass and a lifetime. But there also exist other kinds of fictitious particles in many-body systems, i.e. 'collective excitations'. These do not center around individual particles, but instead involve collective, wavelike motion of all the particles in the system simultaneously."
  4. ^ "Ultracold atoms permit direct observation of quasiparticle dynamics". Physics World. 18 March 2021. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  5. ^ Kozhevnikov, A. B. (2004). Stalin's great science : the times and adventures of Soviet physicists. London: Imperial College Press. ISBN 1-86094-601-1. OCLC 62416599.
  6. ^ Ohtsu, Motoichi; Kobayashi, Kiyoshi; Kawazoe, Tadashi; Yatsui, Takashi; Naruse, Makoto (2008). Principles of Nanophotonics. CRC Press. p. 205. ISBN 9781584889731.
  7. ^ Gelfert, Axel (2003). "Manipulative success and the unreal". International Studies in the Philosophy of Science. 17 (3): 245–263. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.405.2111. doi:10.1080/0269859032000169451. S2CID 18345614.
  8. ^ B. Falkenburg, Particle Metaphysics (The Frontiers Collection), Berlin: Springer 2007, esp. pp. 243–46
  9. ^ "Physics Today Article".
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 June 2008.
  11. ^ Goldman, Vladimir J (2007). "Fractional quantum Hall effect: A game of five-halves". Nature Physics. 3 (8): 517. Bibcode:2007NatPh...3..517G. doi:10.1038/nphys681.
  12. ^ "Josephson Junctions". Science and Technology Review. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
  13. ^ J. E. Hoffman; McElroy, K; Lee, DH; Lang, KM; Eisaki, H; Uchida, S; Davis, JC; et al. (2002). "Imaging Quasiparticle Interference in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ". Science. 297 (5584): 1148–51. arXiv:cond-mat/0209276. Bibcode:2002Sci...297.1148H. doi:10.1126/science.1072640. PMID 12142440. S2CID 95868563.
  14. ^ Banerjee, A.; Bridges, C. A.; Yan, J.-Q.; et al. (4 April 2016). "Proximate Kitaev quantum spin liquid behaviour in a honeycomb magnet". Nature Materials. 15 (7): 733–740. arXiv:1504.08037. Bibcode:2016NatMa..15..733B. doi:10.1038/nmat4604. PMID 27043779. S2CID 3406627.
  15. ^ Shaginyan, V. R.; et al. (2012). "Identification of Strongly Correlated Spin Liquid in Herbertsmithite". EPL. 97 (5): 56001. arXiv:1111.0179. Bibcode:2012EL.....9756001S. doi:10.1209/0295-5075/97/56001. S2CID 119288349.
  16. ^ Schmidt, Richard; Lemeshko, Mikhail (18 May 2015). "Rotation of Quantum Impurities in the Presence of a Many-Body Environment". Physical Review Letters. 114 (20): 203001. arXiv:1502.03447. Bibcode:2015PhRvL.114t3001S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.203001. PMID 26047225. S2CID 9111150.
  17. ^ Lemeshko, Mikhail (27 February 2017). "Quasiparticle Approach to Molecules Interacting with Quantum Solvents". Physical Review Letters. 118 (9): 095301. arXiv:1610.01604. Bibcode:2017PhRvL.118i5301L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.095301. PMID 28306270. S2CID 5190749.
  18. ^ "Existence of a new quasiparticle demonstrated". Phys.org. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  19. ^ Xu, S.Y.; Alidoust, N.; Chang, G.; et al. (2 June 2017). "Discovery of Lorentz-violating type II Weyl fermions in LaAlGe". Science Advances. 3 (6): e1603266. Bibcode:2017SciA....3E3266X. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1603266. PMC 5457030. PMID 28630919.
  20. ^ Li, Mingda; Tsurimaki, Yoichiro; Meng, Qingping; Andrejevic, Nina; Zhu, Yimei; Mahan, Gerald D.; Chen, Gang (2018). "Theory of electron–phonon–dislon interacting system—toward a quantized theory of dislocations". New Journal of Physics. 20 (2): 023010. arXiv:1708.07143. Bibcode:2018NJPh...20b3010L. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/aaa383. S2CID 119423231.
  21. ^ Saeed, Imran; Pak, Hyuk Kyu; Tlusty, Tsvi (26 January 2023). "Quasiparticles, flat bands and the melting of hydrodynamic matter". Nature Physics. 19 (4): 536–544. arXiv:2203.13615. Bibcode:2023NatPh..19..536S. doi:10.1038/s41567-022-01893-5. ISSN 1745-2481. S2CID 247749037.

Further reading edit

  • L. D. Landau, Soviet Phys. JETP. 3:920 (1957)
  • L. D. Landau, Soviet Phys. JETP. 5:101 (1957)
  • A. A. Abrikosov, L. P. Gor'kov, and I. E. Dzyaloshinski, Methods of Quantum Field Theory in Statistical Physics (1963, 1975). Prentice-Hall, New Jersey; Dover Publications, New York.
  • D. Pines, and P. Nozières, The Theory of Quantum Liquids (1966). W.A. Benjamin, New York. Volume I: Normal Fermi Liquids (1999). Westview Press, Boulder.
  • J. W. Negele, and H. Orland, Quantum Many-Particle Systems (1998). Westview Press, Boulder

External links edit

  • – Scientists find new 'quasiparticles'
  • by Jacqui Hayes, Cosmos 6 June 2008. Accessed June 2008

quasiparticle, condensed, matter, physics, quasiparticle, concept, used, describe, collective, behavior, group, particles, that, treated, they, were, single, particle, formally, quasiparticles, collective, excitations, closely, related, phenomena, that, arise,. In condensed matter physics a quasiparticle is a concept used to describe a collective behavior of a group of particles that can be treated as if they were a single particle Formally quasiparticles and collective excitations are closely related phenomena that arise when a microscopically complicated system such as a solid behaves as if it contained different weakly interacting particles in vacuum For example as an electron travels through a semiconductor its motion is disturbed in a complex way by its interactions with other electrons and with atomic nuclei The electron behaves as though it has a different effective mass travelling unperturbed in vacuum Such an electron is called an electron quasiparticle 1 In another example the aggregate motion of electrons in the valence band of a semiconductor or a hole band in a metal 2 behave as though the material instead contained positively charged quasiparticles called electron holes Other quasiparticles or collective excitations include the phonon a quasiparticle derived from the vibrations of atoms in a solid and the plasmons a particle derived from plasma oscillation These phenomena are typically called quasiparticles if they are related to fermions and called collective excitations if they are related to bosons 1 although the precise distinction is not universally agreed upon 3 Thus electrons and electron holes fermions are typically called quasiparticles while phonons and plasmons bosons are typically called collective excitations The quasiparticle concept is important in condensed matter physics because it can simplify the many body problem in quantum mechanics The theory of quasiparticles was started by the Soviet physicist Lev Landau in the 1930s 4 5 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 General introduction 1 2 Relation to many body quantum mechanics 1 3 Distinction between quasiparticles and collective excitations 1 4 Effect on bulk properties 1 5 History 2 Examples of quasiparticles and collective excitations 2 1 More common examples 2 2 More specialized examples 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksOverview editGeneral introduction edit Solids are made of only three kinds of particles electrons protons and neutrons None of these are quasiparticles instead a quasiparticle is an emergent phenomenon that occurs inside the solid Therefore while it is quite possible to have a single particle electron proton or neutron floating in space a quasiparticle can only exist inside interacting many particle systems such as solids Motion in a solid is extremely complicated Each electron and proton is pushed and pulled by Coulomb s law by all the other electrons and protons in the solid which may themselves be in motion It is these strong interactions that make it very difficult to predict and understand the behavior of solids see many body problem On the other hand the motion of a non interacting classical particle is relatively simple it would move in a straight line at constant velocity This is the motivation for the concept of quasiparticles The complicated motion of the real particles in a solid can be mathematically transformed into the much simpler motion of imagined quasiparticles which behave more like non interacting particles In summary quasiparticles are a mathematical tool for simplifying the description of solids Relation to many body quantum mechanics edit nbsp Any system no matter how complicated has a ground state along with an infinite series of higher energy excited states The principal motivation for quasiparticles is that it is almost impossible to directly describe every particle in a macroscopic system For example a barely visible 0 1mm grain of sand contains around 1017 nuclei and 1018 electrons Each of these attracts or repels every other by Coulomb s law In principle the Schrodinger equation predicts exactly how this system will behave But the Schrodinger equation in this case is a partial differential equation PDE on a 3 1018 dimensional vector space one dimension for each coordinate x y z of each particle Directly and straightforwardly trying to solve such a PDE is impossible in practice Solving a PDE on a 2 dimensional space is typically much harder than solving a PDE on a 1 dimensional space whether analytically or numerically solving a PDE on a 3 dimensional space is significantly harder still and thus solving a PDE on a 3 1018 dimensional space is quite impossible by straightforward methods One simplifying factor is that the system as a whole like any quantum system has a ground state and various excited states with higher and higher energy above the ground state In many contexts only the low lying excited states with energy reasonably close to the ground state are relevant This occurs because of the Boltzmann distribution which implies that very high energy thermal fluctuations are unlikely to occur at any given temperature Quasiparticles and collective excitations are a type of low lying excited state For example a crystal at absolute zero is in the ground state but if one phonon is added to the crystal in other words if the crystal is made to vibrate slightly at a particular frequency then the crystal is now in a low lying excited state The single phonon is called an elementary excitation More generally low lying excited states may contain any number of elementary excitations for example many phonons along with other quasiparticles and collective excitations 6 When the material is characterized as having several elementary excitations this statement presupposes that the different excitations can be combined In other words it presupposes that the excitations can coexist simultaneously and independently This is never exactly true For example a solid with two identical phonons does not have exactly twice the excitation energy of a solid with just one phonon because the crystal vibration is slightly anharmonic However in many materials the elementary excitations are very close to being independent Therefore as a starting point they are treated as free independent entities and then corrections are included via interactions between the elementary excitations such as phonon phonon scattering Therefore using quasiparticles collective excitations instead of analyzing 1018 particles one needs to deal with only a handful of somewhat independent elementary excitations It is therefore a very effective approach to simplify the many body problem in quantum mechanics This approach is not useful for all systems however For example in strongly correlated materials the elementary excitations are so far from being independent that it is not even useful as a starting point to treat them as independent Distinction between quasiparticles and collective excitations edit Usually an elementary excitation is called a quasiparticle if it is a fermion and a collective excitation if it is a boson 1 However the precise distinction is not universally agreed upon 3 There is a difference in the way that quasiparticles and collective excitations are intuitively envisioned 3 A quasiparticle is usually thought of as being like a dressed particle it is built around a real particle at its core but the behavior of the particle is affected by the environment A standard example is the electron quasiparticle an electron in a crystal behaves as if it had an effective mass which differs from its real mass On the other hand a collective excitation is usually imagined to be a reflection of the aggregate behavior of the system with no single real particle at its core A standard example is the phonon which characterizes the vibrational motion of every atom in the crystal However these two visualizations leave some ambiguity For example a magnon in a ferromagnet can be considered in one of two perfectly equivalent ways a as a mobile defect a misdirected spin in a perfect alignment of magnetic moments or b as a quantum of a collective spin wave that involves the precession of many spins In the first case the magnon is envisioned as a quasiparticle in the second case as a collective excitation However both a and b are equivalent and correct descriptions As this example shows the intuitive distinction between a quasiparticle and a collective excitation is not particularly important or fundamental The problems arising from the collective nature of quasiparticles have also been discussed within the philosophy of science notably in relation to the identity conditions of quasiparticles and whether they should be considered real by the standards of for example entity realism 7 8 Effect on bulk properties edit By investigating the properties of individual quasiparticles it is possible to obtain a great deal of information about low energy systems including the flow properties and heat capacity In the heat capacity example a crystal can store energy by forming phonons and or forming excitons and or forming plasmons etc Each of these is a separate contribution to the overall heat capacity History edit The idea of quasiparticles originated in Lev Landau s theory of Fermi liquids which was originally invented for studying liquid helium 3 For these systems a strong similarity exists between the notion of quasiparticle and dressed particles in quantum field theory The dynamics of Landau s theory is defined by a kinetic equation of the mean field type A similar equation the Vlasov equation is valid for a plasma in the so called plasma approximation In the plasma approximation charged particles are considered to be moving in the electromagnetic field collectively generated by all other particles and hard collisions between the charged particles are neglected When a kinetic equation of the mean field type is a valid first order description of a system second order corrections determine the entropy production and generally take the form of a Boltzmann type collision term in which figure only far collisions between virtual particles In other words every type of mean field kinetic equation and in fact every mean field theory involves a quasiparticle concept Examples of quasiparticles and collective excitations editThis section contains examples of quasiparticles and collective excitations The first subsection below contains common ones that occur in a wide variety of materials under ordinary conditions the second subsection contains examples that arise only in special contexts More common examples edit See also List of quasiparticles In solids an electron quasiparticle is an electron as affected by the other forces and interactions in the solid The electron quasiparticle has the same charge and spin as a normal elementary particle electron and like a normal electron it is a fermion However its mass can differ substantially from that of a normal electron see the article effective mass 1 Its electric field is also modified as a result of electric field screening In many other respects especially in metals under ordinary conditions these so called Landau quasiparticles citation needed closely resemble familiar electrons as Crommie s quantum corral showed an STM can clearly image their interference upon scattering A hole is a quasiparticle consisting of the lack of an electron in a state it is most commonly used in the context of empty states in the valence band of a semiconductor 1 A hole has the opposite charge of an electron A phonon is a collective excitation associated with the vibration of atoms in a rigid crystal structure It is a quantum of a sound wave A magnon is a collective excitation 1 associated with the electrons spin structure in a crystal lattice It is a quantum of a spin wave In materials a photon quasiparticle is a photon as affected by its interactions with the material In particular the photon quasiparticle has a modified relation between wavelength and energy dispersion relation as described by the material s index of refraction It may also be termed a polariton especially near a resonance of the material For example an exciton polariton is a superposition of an exciton and a photon a phonon polariton is a superposition of a phonon and a photon A plasmon is a collective excitation which is the quantum of plasma oscillations wherein all the electrons simultaneously oscillate with respect to all the ions A polaron is a quasiparticle which comes about when an electron interacts with the polarization of its surrounding ions An exciton is an electron and hole bound together A plasmariton is a coupled optical phonon and dressed photon consisting of a plasmon and photon More specialized examples edit A roton is a collective excitation associated with the rotation of a fluid often a superfluid It is a quantum of a vortex Composite fermions arise in a two dimensional system subject to a large magnetic field most famously those systems that exhibit the fractional quantum Hall effect 9 These quasiparticles are quite unlike normal particles in two ways First their charge can be less than the electron charge e In fact they have been observed with charges of e 3 e 4 e 5 and e 7 10 Second they can be anyons an exotic type of particle that is neither a fermion nor boson 11 Stoner excitations in ferromagnetic metals Bogoliubov quasiparticles in superconductors Superconductivity is carried by Cooper pairs usually described as pairs of electrons that move through the crystal lattice without resistance A broken Cooper pair is called a Bogoliubov quasiparticle 12 It differs from the conventional quasiparticle in metal because it combines the properties of a negatively charged electron and a positively charged hole an electron void Physical objects like impurity atoms from which quasiparticles scatter in an ordinary metal only weakly affect the energy of a Cooper pair in a conventional superconductor In conventional superconductors interference between Bogoliubov quasiparticles is tough for an STM to see Because of their complex global electronic structures however high Tc cuprate superconductors are another matter Thus Davis and his colleagues were able to resolve distinctive patterns of quasiparticle interference in Bi 2212 13 A Majorana fermion is a particle which equals its own antiparticle and can emerge as a quasiparticle in certain superconductors or in a quantum spin liquid 14 Magnetic monopoles arise in condensed matter systems such as spin ice and carry an effective magnetic charge as well as being endowed with other typical quasiparticle properties such as an effective mass They may be formed through spin flips in frustrated pyrochlore ferromagnets and interact through a Coulomb potential Skyrmions and Hopfions Spinon is represented by quasiparticle produced as a result of electron spin charge separation and can form both quantum spin liquid and strongly correlated quantum spin liquid in some minerals like Herbertsmithite 15 Angulons can be used to describe the rotation of molecules in solvents First postulated theoretically in 2015 16 the existence of the angulon was confirmed in February 2017 after a series of experiments spanning 20 years Heavy and light species of molecules were found to rotate inside superfluid helium droplets in good agreement with the angulon theory 17 18 Type II Weyl fermions break Lorentz symmetry the foundation of the special theory of relativity which cannot be broken by real particles 19 A dislon is a quantized field associated with the quantization of the lattice displacement field of a crystal dislocation It is a quantum of vibration and static strain field of a dislocation line 20 Hydrodynamic pair or duon is a quasiparticle made of two particles coupled by hydrodynamic forces These classical quasiparticles were observed as the elementary excitations in a 2D colloidal crystal driven by viscous flow 21 The pairs are stabilized because the forces the particles exert on each other are of the same magnitude and direction in contrast to momentum conserving forces which are opposite by Newton s 3rd law The resulting pairs duons are zero frequency excitations that emerge at the Dirac cones of the crystal s spectrum See also editFractionalization List of quasiparticles Mean field theory Pseudoparticle Composite fermion Composite bosonReferences edit a b c d e f Efthimios Kaxiras 9 January 2003 Atomic and Electronic Structure of Solids Cambridge University Press pp 65 69 ISBN 978 0 521 52339 4 Ashcroft and Mermin 1976 Solid State Physics 1st ed Holt Rinehart and Winston pp 299 302 ISBN 978 0030839931 a b c A guide to Feynman diagrams in the many body problem by Richard D Mattuck p10 As we have seen the quasiparticle consists of the original real individual particle plus a cloud of disturbed neighbors It behaves very much like an individual particle except that it has an effective mass and a lifetime But there also exist other kinds of fictitious particles in many body systems i e collective excitations These do not center around individual particles but instead involve collective wavelike motion of all the particles in the system simultaneously Ultracold atoms permit direct observation of quasiparticle dynamics Physics World 18 March 2021 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Kozhevnikov A B 2004 Stalin s great science the times and adventures of Soviet physicists London Imperial College Press ISBN 1 86094 601 1 OCLC 62416599 Ohtsu Motoichi Kobayashi Kiyoshi Kawazoe Tadashi Yatsui Takashi Naruse Makoto 2008 Principles of Nanophotonics CRC Press p 205 ISBN 9781584889731 Gelfert Axel 2003 Manipulative success and the unreal International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 17 3 245 263 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 405 2111 doi 10 1080 0269859032000169451 S2CID 18345614 B Falkenburg Particle Metaphysics The Frontiers Collection Berlin Springer 2007 esp pp 243 46 Physics Today Article Cosmos magazine June 2008 Archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Goldman Vladimir J 2007 Fractional quantum Hall effect A game of five halves Nature Physics 3 8 517 Bibcode 2007NatPh 3 517G doi 10 1038 nphys681 Josephson Junctions Science and Technology Review Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory J E Hoffman McElroy K Lee DH Lang KM Eisaki H Uchida S Davis JC et al 2002 Imaging Quasiparticle Interference in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 d Science 297 5584 1148 51 arXiv cond mat 0209276 Bibcode 2002Sci 297 1148H doi 10 1126 science 1072640 PMID 12142440 S2CID 95868563 Banerjee A Bridges C A Yan J Q et al 4 April 2016 Proximate Kitaev quantum spin liquid behaviour in a honeycomb magnet Nature Materials 15 7 733 740 arXiv 1504 08037 Bibcode 2016NatMa 15 733B doi 10 1038 nmat4604 PMID 27043779 S2CID 3406627 Shaginyan V R et al 2012 Identification of Strongly Correlated Spin Liquid in Herbertsmithite EPL 97 5 56001 arXiv 1111 0179 Bibcode 2012EL 9756001S doi 10 1209 0295 5075 97 56001 S2CID 119288349 Schmidt Richard Lemeshko Mikhail 18 May 2015 Rotation of Quantum Impurities in the Presence of a Many Body Environment Physical Review Letters 114 20 203001 arXiv 1502 03447 Bibcode 2015PhRvL 114t3001S doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 114 203001 PMID 26047225 S2CID 9111150 Lemeshko Mikhail 27 February 2017 Quasiparticle Approach to Molecules Interacting with Quantum Solvents Physical Review Letters 118 9 095301 arXiv 1610 01604 Bibcode 2017PhRvL 118i5301L doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 118 095301 PMID 28306270 S2CID 5190749 Existence of a new quasiparticle demonstrated Phys org Retrieved 1 March 2017 Xu S Y Alidoust N Chang G et al 2 June 2017 Discovery of Lorentz violating type II Weyl fermions in LaAlGe Science Advances 3 6 e1603266 Bibcode 2017SciA 3E3266X doi 10 1126 sciadv 1603266 PMC 5457030 PMID 28630919 Li Mingda Tsurimaki Yoichiro Meng Qingping Andrejevic Nina Zhu Yimei Mahan Gerald D Chen Gang 2018 Theory of electron phonon dislon interacting system toward a quantized theory of dislocations New Journal of Physics 20 2 023010 arXiv 1708 07143 Bibcode 2018NJPh 20b3010L doi 10 1088 1367 2630 aaa383 S2CID 119423231 Saeed Imran Pak Hyuk Kyu Tlusty Tsvi 26 January 2023 Quasiparticles flat bands and the melting of hydrodynamic matter Nature Physics 19 4 536 544 arXiv 2203 13615 Bibcode 2023NatPh 19 536S doi 10 1038 s41567 022 01893 5 ISSN 1745 2481 S2CID 247749037 Further reading editL D Landau Soviet Phys JETP 3 920 1957 L D Landau Soviet Phys JETP 5 101 1957 A A Abrikosov L P Gor kov and I E Dzyaloshinski Methods of Quantum Field Theory in Statistical Physics 1963 1975 Prentice Hall New Jersey Dover Publications New York D Pines and P Nozieres The Theory of Quantum Liquids 1966 W A Benjamin New York Volume I Normal Fermi Liquids 1999 Westview Press Boulder J W Negele and H Orland Quantum Many Particle Systems 1998 Westview Press BoulderExternal links editPhysOrg com Scientists find new quasiparticles Curious quasiparticles baffle physicists by Jacqui Hayes Cosmos 6 June 2008 Accessed June 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quasiparticle amp oldid 1179680299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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