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How correlation suppresses density fluctuations in the uniform electron gas of one, two, or three dimensions

✍ Scribed by Paul Ziesche; Jianmin Tao; Michael Seidl; John P. Perdew


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
250 KB
Volume
77
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7608

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✦ Synopsis


The particle number N fluctuates in a spherical volume fragment of a uniform electron gas. In an ideal classical-gas or "Hartree" model, the fluctuation is strong, with ( N ) 2 = N . We show in detail how this fluctuation is reduced by exchange in the ideal Fermi gas and further reduced by Coulomb correlation in the interacting Fermi gas. Besides the mean particle number N and mean square fluctuation ( N ) 2 = (N 2 ) -(N ) 2 , we also examine the full probability distribution P (N). The latter is approximately Gaussian, and exactly Gaussian for N 1. More precisely, for any N it is a Poisson distribution for the ideal classical gas and a modified Poisson distribution for the ideal or interacting Fermi gases. While most of our results are for nonzero densities and three dimensions, we also consider fluctuations in the low-density or strictly correlated limit and in the electron gas of one or two dimensions. In one dimension, the electrons may be strictly correlated at all finite densities. Fulde's fluctuation-based index of correlation strength applies to the uniform gas in any number of dimensions.