?Hi Joseph,

Thank you a lot for the fast and detailed response and the example. Now I 
understand much better.


Kind regards,


Marc



------------------------
Marc Vila Tusell
La Caixa - Severo Ochoa PhD in the Theoretical and Computational Nanoscience 
Group
Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICN2)
Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (BIST)

Additional information:

http://icn2.cat/en/theoretical-and-computational-nanoscience-group

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marc_Vila_Tusell

https://www.becarioslacaixa.net/marc-vila-tusell-BI00042?nav=true

https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9118-421X



________________________________
From: Joseph Weston <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 22, 2018 11:03 AM
To: Marc Vila; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Kwant] Units of density


Hi,


I've found in other threads in the mailing list that the units of current is 
for example (unit of charge)/(hbar/unit of energy) 
(https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg01100.html). 
Also, the local density of states has units of energy/volume 
(https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00169.html?<https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00169.html%E2%80%8B>).

The units of local density of states is rather "per energy per volume" (this is 
what is written in the linked message) not "energy per volume". Though


My question is, what is the units of the output of the density operator? Is it 
energy/volume as well?

It is "per energy per volume", as is the local density of states.

If you sum the output of a kwant.operator.Density for all scattering states at 
a given energy and divide the result by 2pi, it will be identical (up to 
numerical precision) to the output of kwant.ldos. I've attached a script that 
illustrates this.


I ask this because intuitively I view it as the square of the wavefunction, but 
it gives me values larger than 1 for each site when there is only 1 mode 
involved (see attached picture) ?so it is not just the probability of findinge 
the electron at that site because this should be maximum 1. I have also noticed 
that the values I get in the colorbar depend on the value of my hopping (e.g. 
case of graphene), but overall I'm not so sure of the units.

The scattering wavefunctions are not normalized over the scattering region, so 
if you sum the absolute square of the wavefunction you will not obtain 1.  The 
lead modes are normalized such that they carry unit current, and the scattering 
wavefunctions are thus normalized in a way that is commensurate with this 
normalization of the lead modes.

In the attached script I also show that the norm of the scattering wavefunction 
over the scattering region is not 1.

Happy Kwanting,

Joe

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