280 research outputs found
Probing Vortex Unbinding via Dipole Fluctuations
We develop a numerical method for detecting a vortex unbinding transition in
a two-dimensional system by measuring large scale fluctuations in the total
vortex dipole moment of the system. These are characterized by a
quantity which measures the number of configurations in a simulation
for which the either or is half the system size. It is shown that
tends to a non-vanishing constant for large system sizes in the
unbound phase, and vanishes in the bound phase. The method is applied to the XY
model both in the absence and presence of a magnetic field. In the latter case,
the system size dependence of suggests that there exist three distinct
phases, one unbound vortex phase, a logarithmically bound phase, and a linearly
bound phase.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
A Renormalization Group Analysis of Coupled Superconducting and Stripe Order in 1+1 Dimensions
In this paper we perform a renormalization group analysis on the 1+1
dimensional version of an effective field theory (previously proposed by
Dung-Hai Lee, cond-mat/011393) describing (quantum) fluctuating stripe and
superconductor orders. We find four possible phases corresponding to stripe
order/disorder combined with superconducting order/disorder.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, revte
Instanton-induced crossover in dense QCD
We study the properties of an instanton ensemble in three-flavor dense QCD
which can be regarded as an instanton plasma weakly interacting by exchanging
the eta' mesons. Based on this description, we explore the chiral phase
transition induced by the instanton ensemble at high baryon density in analogy
with the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. Using the renormalization
group approach, we show that the instanton ensemble always behaves as a
screened and unpaired plasma. We also demonstrate that the chiral condensate in
dense QCD is proportional to the instanton density.Comment: 15 pages; version to appear in JHE
Magnetoinductance of Josephson junction array with frozen vortex diffusion
The dependence of sheet impedance of a Josephson junction array on the
applied magnetic field is investigated in the regime when vortex diffusion
between array plaquettes is effectively frozen due to low enough temperature.
The field dependent contribution to sheet inductance is found to be
proportional to f*ln(1/f), where f<<1 is the magnitude of the field expressed
in terms of flux quanta per plaquette.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
Exact Calculation of the Vortex-Antivortex Interaction Energy in the Anisotropic 3D XY-model
We have developed an exact method to calculate the vortex-antivortex
interaction energy in the anisotropic 3D-XY model. For this calculation, dual
transformation which is already known for the 2D XY-model was extended. We
found an explicit form of this interaction energy as a function of the
anisotropic ratio and the separation between the vortex and antivortex
located on the same layer. The form of interaction energy is at the
small limi t but is proportional to at the opposite limit. This form of
interaction energ y is consistent with the upper bound calculation using the
variational method by Cataudella and Minnhagen.Comment: REVTeX 12 pages, In print for publication in Phys. Rev.
Finite Size and Current Effects on IV Characteristics of Josephson Junction Arrays
The effects of finite size and of finite current on the current-voltage
characteristics of Josephson junction arrays is studied both theoretically and
by numerical simulations. The cross-over from non-linear to linear behavior at
low temperature is shown to be a finite size effect and the non-linear behavior
at higher temperature, , is shown to be a finite current effect.
These are argued to result from competition between the three length scales
characterizing the system. The importance of boundary effects is discussed and
it is shown that these may dominate the behavior in small arrays.Comment: 5 pages, figures included, to appear in PR
Universality Class of Models
We point out that existing numerical data on the correlation length and
magnetic susceptibility suggest that the two dimensional model with
standard action has critical exponent , which is inconsistent with
asymptotic freedom. This value of is also different from the one of the
Wess-Zumino-Novikov-Witten model that is supposed to correspond to the
model at .Comment: 8 pages, with 3 figures included, postscript. An error concerning the
errors has been correcte
Exactly Solvable Ginzburg-Landau theories of Superconducting Order Parameters coupled to Elastic Modes
We consider two families of exactly solvable models describing thermal
fluctuations in two-dimensional superconductors coupled to phonons living in an
insulating layer, and study the stability of the superconducting state with
respect to vortices. The two families are characterized by one or two
superconducting planes. The results suggest that the effective critical
temperature increases with the thickness of the insulating layer. Also the
presence of the additional superconducting layer has the same effect.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review
Aspect-ratio dependence of the spin stiffness of a two-dimensional XY model
We calculate the superfluid stiffness of 2D lattice hard-core bosons at
half-filling (equivalent to the S=1/2 XY-model) using the squared winding
number quantum Monte Carlo estimator. For L_x x L_y lattices with aspect ratio
L_x/L_y=R, and L_x,L_y -> infinity, we confirm the recent prediction [N.
Prokof'ev and B.V. Svistunov, Phys. Rev. B 61, 11282 (1999)] that the
finite-temperature stiffness parameters \rho^W_x and \rho^W_y determined from
the winding number differ from each other and from the true superfluid density
\rho_s. Formally, \rho^W_y -> \rho_s in the limit in which L_x -> infinity
first and then L_y -> infinity. In practice we find that \rho^W_y converges
exponentially to \rho_s for R>1. We also confirm that for 3D systems, \rho^W_x
= \rho^W_y = \rho^W_z = \rho_s for any R. In addition, we determine the
Kosterlitz-Thouless transition temperature to be T_KT/J=0.34303(8) for the 2D
model.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Minor changes to published versio
Montecarlo simulation of the role of defects as the melting mechanism
We study in this paper the melting transition of a crystal of fcc structure
with the Lennard-Jones potential, by using isobaric-isothermal Monte Carlo
simulations.
Local and collective updates are sequentially used to optimize the
convergence. We show the important role played by defects in the melting
mechanism in favor of modern melting theories.Comment: 6 page, 10 figures included. Corrected version to appear in Phys.
Rev.
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