Page preview panel
ON OFF

This is the graph of pages.

All pages ("nodes") in Knowen belong to a directed acyclic graph: more general nodes are to the left (upstream), and more specific to the right (downstream).

Hover over a node to see the node preview; click to select a specific node; mouse scroll to zoom; click and drag to move.

Now you are in the subtree of Special Topics in Many-Body Theory, Spring 2016 project. 

One-dimensional physics

There are quite a few special aspects of many-body physics in one dimension. One of the most important is that the difference between bosons (including spins, as spin operators commute on different sites, like Bose operators) and fermions, which is dramatic in higher dimensions, is surprisingly small in one dimension. We give an example of equivalence between fermonic and bosonic particles via the Jordan-Wigner transform applied to the "XX model" of spins, which turns out to be free fermions in disguise. The basics of the Bethe ansatz solution of certain one-dimensional interacting models are also described.