English

Quantumdots

Condensed Matter 2007-05-23 v1

Abstract

Atomic-like systems in which electronic motion is two dimensional are now realizable as ``quantum dots''. In place of the attraction of a nucleus there is a confining potential, usually assumed to be quadratic. Additionally, a perpendicular magnetic field BB may be present. We review some recent rigorous results for these systems. We have shown that a Thomas-Fermi type theory for the ground state is asymptotically correct when NN and BB tend to infinity. There are several mathematically and physically novel features. 1. The derivation of the appropriate Lieb-Thirring inequality requires some added effort. 2. When BB is appropriately large the TF ``kinetic energy'' term disappears and a peculiar ``classical'' continuum electrostatic theory emerges. This is a two dimensional problem, but with a three dimensional Coulomb potential. 3. Corresponding to this continuum theory is a discrete ``classical'' electrostatic theory. The former provides an upper bound and the latter a lower bound to the true quantum energy; the problem of relating the two classical energies offers an amusing exercise in electrostatics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/9404099,
  title  = {Quantumdots},
  author = {E. H. Lieb and J. P. Solovej and J. Yngvason},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/9404099},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

20 pages, self-extracting uufile containing a plain TeX file and 2 postscript figures