Two Kinds of Bosons and Bose Condensates

W. KOHN and D. SHERRINGTON
Rev. Mod. Phys. 42, 1 – Published 1 January 1970
PDFExport Citation

Abstract

This paper deals with ordinary material systems whose elementary constitutents are fermions. It is pointed out that in such systems there can occur two kinds of bosons with quite different physical and mathematical characteristics. Type I bosons are bound complexes of an even number of fermions (such as He4); and type II bosons are elementary excitations which are bound complexes of fermions and their holes (such as excitons). When the first type condenses, a superfluid state results with so-called off-diagonal, long-range order; while when the second type condenses, there is no superfluidity, but a change in spatial order. Thus both kinds of long-range order are related to Bose condensation.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.42.1

    ©1970 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    W. KOHN and D. SHERRINGTON

    • Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California

    References (Subscription Required)

    Click to Expand
    Issue

    Vol. 42, Iss. 1 — January - March 1970

    Reuse & Permissions
    Access Options
    Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

    Authorization Required


    ×
    ×

    Images

    ×

    Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Reviews of Modern Physics

    Log In

    Cancel
    ×

    Search


    Article Lookup

    Paste a citation or DOI

    Enter a citation
    ×