Improving Mean-Field Theory for Bosons in Optical Lattices via Degenerate Perturbation Theory
M. K\"ubler, F. T. Sant'Ana, F. E. A. dos Santos, A. Pelster

TL;DR
This paper improves the theoretical description of the Mott-insulator to superfluid transition in Bose gases within optical lattices by applying Brillouin-Wigner perturbation theory, addressing degeneracy issues overlooked in previous mean-field approaches.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of Brillouin-Wigner perturbation theory to the mean-field Bose-Hubbard model, providing more accurate phase boundary calculations and condensate density analysis.
Findings
More physically meaningful phase boundaries obtained.
Extended parameter regions accessible for analysis.
Enhanced understanding of particle-density profiles in experiments.
Abstract
The objective of this paper is the theoretical description of the Mott-insulator to superfluid quantum phase transition of a Bose gas in an optical lattice. In former works the Rayleigh-Schr\"odinger perturbation theory was used within a mean-field approach, which yields partially non-physical results since the degeneracy between two adjacent Mott lobes is not taken into account. In order to correct such non-physical results we apply the Brillouin-Wigner perturbation theory to the mean-field approximation of the Bose-Hubbard model. Detailed explanations of how to use the Brillouin-Wigner theory are presented, including a graphical approach that allows to efficiently keep track of the respective analytic terms. To prove the validity of this computation, the results are compared with other works. Besides the analytic calculation of the phase boundary from Mott-insulator to superfluid…
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