A variational approach based on the path-integral formulation of the statistical mechanics is applied to calculate the partition function and the related thermodynamic quantities of one-dimensional kink bearing fields. This is done by determining an effective potential which includes in a complete quantum way the linear modes of the field, while treating variationally the nonlinear excitations. The treatment is applied both to integrable systems, like Sine-Gordon and to non integrable ones, like phi^4 and Double Sine-Gordon. The temperature renormalization can be separately studied both for the vacuum and the one-soliton sector in order to find the low temperature properties in self consistent one-loop approximation. Moreover a low-coupling expansion is given and its range of applicability is found to be much wider than the Wigner expansion. Comparisons with quantum Monte-Carlo results and exact results obtained by Bethe Ansatz are presented
Effective potential for the quantum thermodynamics of integrable and non-integrable one-dimensional systems
1989
Abstract
A variational approach based on the path-integral formulation of the statistical mechanics is applied to calculate the partition function and the related thermodynamic quantities of one-dimensional kink bearing fields. This is done by determining an effective potential which includes in a complete quantum way the linear modes of the field, while treating variationally the nonlinear excitations. The treatment is applied both to integrable systems, like Sine-Gordon and to non integrable ones, like phi^4 and Double Sine-Gordon. The temperature renormalization can be separately studied both for the vacuum and the one-soliton sector in order to find the low temperature properties in self consistent one-loop approximation. Moreover a low-coupling expansion is given and its range of applicability is found to be much wider than the Wigner expansion. Comparisons with quantum Monte-Carlo results and exact results obtained by Bethe Ansatz are presentedI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


