Author:
Yannouleas Constantine,Landman Uzi
Abstract
Investigations of emergent symmetry breaking phenomena occurring in small finite-size
systems are reviewed, with a focus on the strongly correlated regime of electrons in
two-dimensional semiconductor quantum dots and trapped ultracold bosonic atoms in
harmonic traps. Throughout the review we emphasize universal aspects and similarities
of symmetry breaking found in these systems, as well as in more traditional fields
like nuclear physics and quantum chemistry, which are characterized by very different
interparticle forces. A unified description of strongly correlated phenomena in
finite systems of repelling particles (whether fermions or bosons) is presented
through the development of a two-step method of symmetry breaking at the unrestricted
Hartree–Fock level and of subsequent symmetry restoration via post Hartree–Fock
projection techniques. Quantitative and qualitative aspects of the two-step method
are treated and validated by exact diagonalization calculations.
Strongly-correlated phenomena emerging from symmetry breaking include the following.
Chemical bonding, dissociation and entanglement (at zero and finite magnetic
fields) in quantum dot molecules and in pinned electron molecular dimers
formed within a single anisotropic quantum dot, with potential technological
applications to solid-state quantum-computing devices.
Electron crystallization, with particle localization on the vertices of
concentric polygonal rings, and formation of rotating electron molecules
(REMs) in circular quantum dots. Such electron molecules exhibit
ro-vibrational excitation spectra, in analogy with natural molecules.
At high magnetic fields, the REMs are described by parameter-free analytic
wave functions, which are an alternative to the Laughlin and
composite-fermion approaches, offering a new point of view of the fractional
quantum Hall regime in quantum dots (with possible implications for the
thermodynamic limit).
Crystalline phases of strongly repelling bosons. In rotating traps and in
analogy with the REMs, such repelling bosons form rotating boson molecules
(RBMs). For a small number of bosons, the RBMs are energetically favored
compared with the Gross–Pitaevskii solutions describing vortex
formation.
We discuss the present status concerning experimental signatures of such strongly
correlated states, in view of the promising outlook created by the latest
experimental improvements that are achieving unprecedented control over the range and
strength of interparticle interactions.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
206 articles.
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