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Although usually considered as a technique for predicting electron states in dense plasmas, atom-in-jellium calculations can be used to predict the mean displacement of the ion from its equilibrium position in colder matter, as a function of compression and temperature. The Lindemann criterion of a critical displacement for melting can then be employed to predict the melt locus, normalizing for instance to the observed melt temperature or to more direct simulations such as molecular dynamics (MD). This approach reproduces the high pressure melting behavior of Al as calculated using the Lindemann model and thermal vibrations in the solid. Applied to Fe, we find that it reproduces the limited-range melt locus of a multiphase equation of state (EOS) and the results of ab initio MD simulations, and agrees less well with a Lindemann construction using an older EOS. The resulting melt locus lies significantly above the older melt locus for pressures above 1.5,TPa, but is closer to recent ab initio MD results and extrapolations of an analytic fit to them. This study confirms the importance of core freezing in massive exoplanets, predicting that a slightly smaller range of exoplanets than previously assessed would be likely to exhibit dynamo generation of magnetic fields by convection in the liquid portion of the core.
Atom-in-jellium calculations of the Einstein frequency in condensed matter and of the equation of state were used to predict the variation of shear modulus from zero pressure to ~$10^7$ g/cm$^3$, for several elements relevant to white dwarf (WD) star
Recent path-integral Monte Carlo and quantum molecular dynamics simulations have shown that computationally efficient average-atom models can predict thermodynamic states in warm dense matter to within a few percent. One such atom-in-jellium model ha
Equations of state (EOS) calculated from a computationally efficient atom-in-jellium treatment of the electronic structure have recently been shown to be consistent with more rigorous path integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) and quantum molecular dynamics (Q
Atom-in-jellium calculations of the Einstein frequency were used to calculate the mean displacement of an ion over a wide range of compression and temperature. Expressed as a fraction of the Wigner-Seitz radius, the displacement is a measure of the a
Atom-in-jellium calculations of the electron states, and perturbative calculations of the Einstein frequency, were used to construct equations of state (EOS) from around $10^{-5}$ to $10^7$g/cm$^3$ and $10^{-4}$ to $10^{6}$eV for elements relevant to