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Study of the LOFF phase diagram in a Ginzburg-Landau approach G. Tonini, University of Florence, Florence, Italy R. Casalbuoni,INFN & University of Florence, Florence, Italy We explained the two tricritical points behavior in the two plane waves case. We provided a general Ginzburg-Landau approach which can be applied to more general cases Different crystalline structures have been analyzed by other authors (Bowers-Rajagopal, Combescot-Mora). The scenario coming from all these studies, is a cascade of different structures with the temperature. In particular the two plane waves case seems to be the most probable near the tricritical point while the face centered cube near T=0. But more work is needed. CONCLUSIONS Initially studied as a pairing mechanism for an electron superconductor with Zeeman splitting between spin-up and spin-down Fermi surfaces. Applied also to dense QCD with three flavors. Cooper pairs with non zero total momentum p -p+2q Fixed |q|~ pF arbitrary directions Rotational and traslational symmetry breaking Crystalline structure Two flavors problem: critical value Paring not allowed everywhere: → blocking and pairing regions The LOFF pairing geometry for a Cooper pair with momentum 2q. Green/red sphere=up/down quark Fermi surface. An up quark with momentum p near its Fermi surface coupled with a down quark with momentum -p+2q. Strongest coupling for up and down quark near the pink rings. Applications Compact stars Explication of pulsar glitches: jumps of the rotational frequency due to the angular momentum stored and then suddenly released by the superfluid neutrons → from the interaction between the rigid crust and the vortices in the neutron superfluid → pinning of the vortices in the crust Vortices in the nodes of the LOFF crystal Existence of strange stars Ultracold Fermi gases BEC: cold bosons → cold fermions (lithium-6 or potassium-40) Feshbach resonance provides an attractive interaction between two different hyperfine states Control the two different atomic densities Expansion of the gas when the trap is switched off →spatial distribution of momenta Observation of LOFF phase by the periodic modulation of the atom densities in the crystalline superfluid Single plane wave case Gap equation: Integrating for T=0: blocking region for Minimizing the granpotential respect to q LOFF phase diagram. The transition between LOFF and normal phase is always second order. The transition between BCS and LOFF is first order. There is one tricritical point at T 0.32 0 Free energies for normal, BCS and LOFF Phase. The LOFF interval is [ 1, 2 ]. THE PHASE DIAGRAM IN THE TWO PLANE WAVE CASE First order transition near T=T tric one more tricritical point! Second order near T=0 one more tricritical point! Ginzburg-Landau expansion Gap equation with propagator expansion = + + Introduction of the Matsubara frequencies Expansion around T=0 All the possible vectors configurations From symmetry considerations Study of the minima of the granpotential three dimensional space! From the type of solution we find the nature (symmetric or broken) of the phase in every octant Suppose and discuss the results in function of . Sum over all the vectors configurations From the study of the second derivative and the equation =0 we find the first order and second order surfaces SECOND ORDER SURFACE SECOND ORDER SURFACE : a=0 between octants 1-2 and, in part, 4-3 FIRST ORDER SURFACE FIRST ORDER SURFACE : D=0, where D is the discriminant of the cubic equation =0 Two tricritical lines: 1. 2. Second tricritical point: when the second order line on the plane =0 meets the tricritical line given by D=0 the position of the tricritical point in the phase space is -dependent Temperature, momentum and chemical potential of the tricritical point respect to What is LOFF phase? hep-ph/0310128 to be published on Phys. Rev. B
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