Abstract

The probability of finding a nearest neighbor at some radial distance from a given particle in a system of interacting particles is of fundamental importance in a host of fields in the physical as well as biological sciences. A procedure is developed to obtain analytical expressions for nearest-neighbor probability functions for random isotropic packings of hard D-dimensional spheres that are accurate for all densities, i.e., up to the random close-packing fraction. Using these results, the mean nearest-neighbor distance \ensuremath{\lambda} as a function of the packing fraction is computed for such many-body systems and compared to rigorous bounds on \ensuremath{\lambda} derived here. Our theoretical results are found to be in excellent agreement with available computer-simulation data.

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