Ground State of an Electron Gas in a Magnetic Field

V. Celli and N. David Mermin
Phys. Rev. 140, A839 – Published 1 November 1965
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Abstract

The ground state of an electron gas in a uniform magnetic field is found to be not the customary uniform state, but rather one in which a spin-density wave exists, directed along the field. This conclusion is reached through what is essentially a Hartree-Fock calculation with a repulsive interaction, but in which no restrictive assumptions are made about either the strength or the range of the exchange interaction. Thus static screening does not eliminate the spin-density wave in the presence of a magnetic field, as it does in the electron gas when no magnetic field is present. The temperature at which the transition to a spin-density-wave state occurs approaches zero as the field vanishes. The pertinent question is therefore not the nature of the ground state, but whether there is a range of field strengths and electronic densities for which the transition temperature is observably high. It is found that spin-density-wave formation is most favorable when only a few Landau levels are occupied, corresponding to large field strengths and low electronic densities. A rough calculation indicates that in InSb a transition temperature as high as 10 millidegrees can be realized.

  • Received 28 April 1965

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.140.A839

©1965 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

V. Celli

  • Universita di Bologna, Bologna, Italy

N. David Mermin

  • Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

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Issue

Vol. 140, Iss. 3A — November 1965

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