Speaker:
Sihong SHAO
unit:
Time:
2019-05-16 10:00-11:00
Venue:
Room 111, Center for Applied Mathematics
starttime:
2019-05-16 10:00-11:00
Profile:
- Theme:
- Recent Progress in Numerical Methods for Many-Body Wigner Quantum Dynamics
- Time:
- 2019-05-16 10:00-11:00
- Venue:
- Room 111, Center for Applied Mathematics
- Speaker:
- Sihong SHAO
Abstract
The Wigner function has provided an equivalent and convenient way to render quantum mechanics in phase space. It allows one to express macroscopically measurable quantities, such as currents and heat fluxes, in statistical forms as usually does in classical statistical mechanics, thereby facilitating its applications in nanoelectronics, quantum optics and etc. Distinct from the Schrödinger equation, the most appealing feature of the Wigner equation, which governs the dynamics of the Wigner function, is that it shares many analogies to the classical mechanism and simply reduces to the classical counterpart when the reduced Planck constant vanishes. Despite the theoretical advantages, numerical resolutions for the Wigner equation is notoriously difficult and remains one of the most challenging problems in computational physics, mainly because of the high dimensionality and nonlocal pseudo-differential operator. On one hand, the commonly used finite difference methods fail to capture the highly oscillatory structure accurately. On the other hand, all existing stochastic algorithms, including the affinity-based Wigner Monte Carlo and signed particle Wigner Monte Carlo methods, have been confined to at most 4D phase space. Few results have been reported for higher dimensional simulations. My group has made substantial progress in both aspects.