Quantum fluctuations can enhance or reduce positional uncertainty at finite temperature
Harukuni Ikeda

TL;DR
This paper investigates how quantum and thermal fluctuations influence positional uncertainty in particles confined in nonlinear potentials, revealing non-monotonic behaviors and potential implications for many-body phenomena like glass transitions.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of positional uncertainty at finite temperature in nonlinear potentials using path integral Monte Carlo and semiclassical methods, highlighting non-monotonic quantum effects.
Findings
Positional uncertainty exhibits non-monotonic dependence on thermal de Broglie wavelength for large n.
Quantum fluctuations can reduce positional uncertainty at small wavelengths with strong nonlinearity.
Implications for many-body phenomena such as glass transitions with non-monotonic transition densities.
Abstract
The uncertainty principle guarantees a non-zero value for the positional uncertainty, , even without thermal fluctuations. This implies that quantum fluctuations inherently enhance positional uncertainty at zero temperature. A natural question then arises: what happens at finite temperatures, where the interplay between quantum and thermal fluctuations may give rise to complex and intriguing behaviors? To address this question, we systematically investigate the positional uncertainty, , of a particle in equilibrium confined within a nonlinear potential of the form , where represents an even exponent. Using path integral Monte Carlo simulations, we calculate in equilibrium as a function of the thermal de Broglie wavelength .…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
