
TL;DR
This paper investigates the distribution of total momentum in quantum fluids, establishing its asymptotic behavior in different dimensions, and explores its implications for phases like superfluidity and solid states.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of total momentum distribution in quantum fluids, linking asymptotic properties to phase characteristics and proposing new criteria for superfluidity.
Findings
In 1D, the normalized total momentum distribution is normal at all temperatures.
In 2D, the tail distribution of normalized total momentum is normal.
The total momentum is finite with nonzero probability in interacting quantum systems above 1D.
Abstract
The probability distribution of the total momentum P is studied in N-particle interacting homogeneous quantum systems at positive temperatures. Using Galilean invariance we prove that in one dimension the asymptotic distribution of P/\sqrt{N} is normal at all temperatures and densities, and in two dimensions the tail distribution of P/\sqrt{N} is normal. We introduce the notion of the density matrix reduced to the center of mass, and show that its eigenvalues are N times the probabilities of the different eigenvalues of \P. A series of results is presented for the limit of sequences of positive definite atomic probability measures, relevant for the probability distribution of both the single-particle and the total momentum. The P=0 ensemble is shown to be equivalent to the canonical ensemble. Through some conjectures we associate the properties of the asymptotic distribution of the…
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