2,310 research outputs found
Comment on "A Tale of Two Theories: Quantum Griffiths Effects in Metallic Systems" by A. H. Castro-Neto and B. A. Jones
In a recent paper Castro-Neto and Jones argue that because the observability
of quantum Griffiths-McCoy effects in metals is controlled by non-universal
quantities, the quantum Griffiths-McCoy scenario may be a viable explanation
for the non-fermi-liquid behavior observed in heavy fermion compounds. In this
Comment we point out that the important non-universal quantity is the damping
of the spin dynamics by the metallic electrons; quantum Griffiths-McCoy effects
occur only if this is parametrically weak relative to other scales in the
problem, i.e. if the spins are decoupled from the carriers. This suggests that
in heavy fermion materials, where the Kondo effect leads to a strong
carrier-spin coupling, quantum Griffiths-McCoy effects are unlikely to occur.Comment: 2 page
Role of oxygen-oxygen hopping in the three-band copper-oxide model: quasiparticle weight, metal insulator and magnetic phase boundaries, gap values and optical conductivity
We investigate the effect of oxygen-oxygen hopping on the three-band
copper-oxide model relevant to high- cuprates, finding that the physics is
changed only slightly as the oxygen-oxygen hopping is varied. The location of
the metal-insulator phase boundary in the plane of interaction strength and
charge transfer energy shifts by eV or less along the charge transfer
axis, the quasiparticle weight has approximately the same magnitude and doping
dependence and the qualitative characteristics of the electron-doped and
hole-doped sides of the phase diagram do not change. The results confirm the
identification of LaCuO as a material with intermediate correlation
strength. However, the magnetic phase boundary as well as higher-energy
features of the optical spectrum are found to depend on the magnitude of the
oxygen-oxygen hopping. We compare our results to previously published one-band
and three-band model calculations.Comment: 13.5 pages, 16 figure
On the Josephson Coupling between a disk of one superconductor and a surrounding superconducting film of a different symmetry
A cylindrical Josephson junction with a spatially dependent Josephson
coupling which averages to zero is studied in order to model the physics of a
disk of d-wave superconductor embedded in a superconducting film of a different
symmetry. It is found that the system always introduces Josepshon vortices in
order to gain energy at the junction. The critical current is calculated. It is
argued that a recent experiment claimed to provide evidence for s-wave
superconductivity in may also be consistent with d-wave
superconductivity. Figures available from the author on request.Comment: 10 pages, revtex3.0, TM-11111-940321-1
The formation of nonequilibrium steady states in interacting double quantum dots: When coherences dominate the charge distribution
We theoretically investigate the full time evolution of a nonequilibrium
double quantum dot structure from initial conditions corresponding to different
product states (no entanglement between dot and lead) to a nonequilibrium
steady state. The structure is described by a two-level spinless Anderson model
where the levels are coupled to two leads held at different chemical
potentials. The problem is solved by a numerically exact hierarchical master
equation technique and the results are compared to approximate ones obtained
from Born-Markov theory. The methods allow us to study the time evolution up to
times of order of the bare hybridization time, enabling eludication of
the role of the initial state on the transient dynamics, coherent charge
oscillations and an interaction-induced renormalization of energy levels. We
find that when the system carries a single electron on average the formation of
the steady state is strongly influenced by the coherence between the dots. The
latter can be sizeable and indeed larger in the presence of a bias voltage than
it is in equilibrium. Moreover, the interdot coherence is shown to lead to a
pronounced difference in the population of the dots.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figures, revised versio
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