Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to the electron liquid
- 2 The Hartree–Fock approximation
- 3 Linear response theory
- 4 Linear response of independent electrons
- 5 Linear response of an interacting electron liquid
- 6 The perturbative calculation of linear response functions
- 7 Density functional theory
- 8 The normal Fermi liquid
- 9 Electrons in one dimension and the Luttinger liquid
- 10 The two-dimensional electron liquid at high magnetic field
- Appendices
- References
- Index
3 - Linear response theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to the electron liquid
- 2 The Hartree–Fock approximation
- 3 Linear response theory
- 4 Linear response of independent electrons
- 5 Linear response of an interacting electron liquid
- 6 The perturbative calculation of linear response functions
- 7 Density functional theory
- 8 The normal Fermi liquid
- 9 Electrons in one dimension and the Luttinger liquid
- 10 The two-dimensional electron liquid at high magnetic field
- Appendices
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
There are countless situations in physics when one is interested in calculating the response of a system to a small time-dependent perturbation acting on it. With some luck the response can be expanded in a power series of the strength of the perturbation, so that, to first order, it is a linear function of the latter. To compute this function is the objective of the linear response theory (LRT).
Linear response theory has many important applications to the study of electronic matter. Virtually all interactions of electrons with experimental probes (electromagnetic fields, beams of particles) can be regarded as small perturbations to the system: if they were not, one would not be probing the system, but the system modified by the probe. Consequently, the results of these experiments can be expressed in terms of linear response functions, which are properties of the unperturbed system. In particular it will turn out that the analytic structure of these functions is entirely determined by the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the unperturbed system. Conversely, a measure of the linear response as a function of the frequency of the perturbation enables us to determine the excitation energies of the system.
Beside being a cornerstone for the theory of single-particle properties to be developed in Chapter 8, the linear response functions also provide invaluable information in their own right. For example, as we will discuss in Chapter 5, the extent to which an external electrostatic potential is reduced by screening is controlled by the dynamical dielectric function which, in turn, is determined by the density–density response function.
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- Quantum Theory of the Electron Liquid , pp. 111 - 156Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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