Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Hubbard Hamiltonian and its symmetries
- 3 The Bethe ansatz solution
- 4 String hypothesis
- 5 Thermodynamics in the Yang-Yang approach
- 6 Ground state properties in the thermodynamic limit
- 7 Excited states at zero temperature
- 8 Finite size corrections at zero temperature
- 9 Asymptotics of correlation functions
- 10 Scaling and continuum limits at half-filling
- 11 Universal correlations at low density
- 12 The algebraic approach to the Hubbard model
- 13 The path integral approach to thermodynamics
- 14 The Yangian symmetry of the Hubbard model
- 15 S-matrix and Yangian symmetry in the infinite interval limit
- 16 Hubbard model in the attractive case
- 17 Mathematical appendices
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Hubbard Hamiltonian and its symmetries
- 3 The Bethe ansatz solution
- 4 String hypothesis
- 5 Thermodynamics in the Yang-Yang approach
- 6 Ground state properties in the thermodynamic limit
- 7 Excited states at zero temperature
- 8 Finite size corrections at zero temperature
- 9 Asymptotics of correlation functions
- 10 Scaling and continuum limits at half-filling
- 11 Universal correlations at low density
- 12 The algebraic approach to the Hubbard model
- 13 The path integral approach to thermodynamics
- 14 The Yangian symmetry of the Hubbard model
- 15 S-matrix and Yangian symmetry in the infinite interval limit
- 16 Hubbard model in the attractive case
- 17 Mathematical appendices
- References
- Index
Summary
On account of Lieb and Wu's 1968 Bethe ansatz solution, the one-dimensional Hubbard model has become a laboratory for theoretical studies of non-perturbative effects in strongly correlated electron systems. Many of the tools available for the analysis of such systems have been applied to this model, both to provide complementary insights to what is known from the exact solution or as an ultimate test of their quality. In parallel, due to the synthesis of new quasi one-dimensional materials and the refinement of experimental techniques, the one-dimensional Hubbard model has evolved from a toy model to a paradigm of experimental relevance for strongly correlated electron systems.
Due to the ongoing efforts to improve our understanding of one-dimensional correlated electron systems, there exists a large number of review articles and books covering various aspects of the general theory, as well as the Bethe ansatz and field theoretical methods. A collection of these works is listed in the General Bibliography below.
Still we felt – and many of our colleagues shared this view – that there would be a need for a coherent account of all of these aspects in a unified framework and from the perspective of the one-dimensional Hubbard model, which, moreover, would be accessible to beginners in the field. This motivated us to write this volume. It is intended to serve both as a textbook and as a monograph.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The One-Dimensional Hubbard Model , pp. xi - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005