106 research outputs found
Comment on ``Quasiparticle Spectra around a Single Vortex in a d-wave Superconductor''
In a recent Letter Morita, Kohmoto and Maki analyzed the structure of
quasiparticle states near a single vortex in a d-wave superconductor using an
approximate version of the Bogoliubov - de Gennes theory. Their principal
result is the existence of a bound state within the core region at finite
energy with full rotational symmetry, which they assert explains the recent
scanning tunneling microscopy results on YBCO single crystals. Here we argue
that the approximation used in this work is fundamentally inadequate for the
description of a d-wave vortex and that the obtained circular symmetry of the
local density of states is an unphysical artifact of this approximation.Comment: 1 page REVTeX, to appear in PR
Topological Excitations of One-Dimensional Correlated Electron Systems
Properties of low-energy excitations in one-dimensional superconductors and
density-wave systems are examined by the bosonization technique. In addition to
the usual spin and charge quantum numbers, a new, independently measurable
attribute is introduced to describe elementary, low-energy excitations. It can
be defined as a number w which determines, in multiple of , how many times
the phase of the order parameter winds as an excitation is transposed from far
left to far right. The winding number is zero for electrons and holes with
conventional quantum numbers, but it acquires a nontrivial value w=1 for
neutral spin-1/2 excitations and for spinless excitations with a unit electron
charge. It may even be irrational, if the charge is irrational. Thus, these
excitations are topological, and they can be viewed as composite particles made
of spin or charge degrees of freedom and dressed by kinks in the order
parameter.Comment: 5 pages. And we are not only splitting point
Subgap states in dirty superconductors and their effect on dephasing in Josephson qubits
We present a theory of the subgap tails of the density of states in a
diffusive superconductor containing magnetic impurities. We show that the
subgap tails have two contributions: one arising from mesoscopic gap
fluctuations, previously discussed by Lamacraft and Simons, and the other
associated to the long-wave fluctuations of the concentration of magnetic
impurities. We study the latter both in small superconducting grains and in
bulk systems [], and establish the dimensionless parameter that
controls which of the two contributions dominates the subgap tails. We observe
that these contributions are related to each other by dimensional reduction. We
apply the theory to estimate the effects of a weak concentration of magnetic
impurities [] on the phase coherence of Josephson
qubits. We find that at these typical concentrations, magnetic impurities are
relevant for the dephasing in large qubits, designed around a
scale, where they limit the quality factor to be .Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Striped superconductors in the extended Hubbard model
We present a minimal model of a doped Mott insulator that simultaneously
supports antiferromagnetic stripes and d-wave superconductivity. We explore the
implications for the global phase diagram of the superconducting cuprates. At
the unrestricted mean-field level, the various phases of the cuprates,
including weak and strong pseudogap phases, and two different types of
superconductivity in the underdoped and the overdoped regimes, find a natural
interpretation. We argue that on the underdoped side, the superconductor is
intrinsically inhomogeneous -- striped coexistence of of superconductivity and
magnetism -- and global phase coherence is achieved through Josephson-like
coupling of the superconducting stripes. On the overdoped side, the state is
overall homogeneous and the superconductivity is of the classical BCS type.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figures. Effect of t' on stripe filling + new
references are adde
Local density of states around a magnetic impurity in high-Tc superconductors based on the t-J model
The local density of states (LDOS) around a magnetic impurity in high-Tc
superconductors is studied using the two-dimensional t-J model with a realistic
band structure. The order parameters are determined in a self-consistent way
within the Gutzwiller approximation and the Bogoliubov-de Gennes theory. In
sharp contrast with the nonmagnetic impurity case, the LDOS near the magnetic
impurity shows two resonance peaks reflecting the presence of spin-dependent
resonance states. It is also shown that these resonance states are
approximately localized around the impurity. The present results have an large
implication on the scanning tunneling spectroscopy observation of
Bi_{2}Sr_{2}Ca(Cu_{1-x}Ni[Zn]_{x})_{2}O_{8+delta}.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Quantum Breathers in a Nonlinear Lattice
We study nonlinear phonon excitations in a one-dimensional quantum nonlinear
lattice model using numerical exact diagonalization. We find that multi-phonon
bound states exist as eigenstates which are natural counterparts of breather
solutions of classical nonlinear systems. In a translationally invariant
system, these quantum breather states form particle-like bands and are
characterized by a finite correlation length. The dynamic structure factor has
significant intensity for the breather states, with a corresponding quenching
of the neighboring bands of multi-phonon extended states.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 4 postscript figures, Physical Relview Letters (in
press
Collective Excitations in High-Temperature Superconductors
Collective, low-energy excitations in quasi-two-dimensional d-wave
superconductors are analyzed. While the long-range Coulomb interaction shifts
the charge-density-wave and phase modes up to the plasma energy, the
spin-density-wave excitation that arises due to a strong local
electron-electron repulsion can propagate as a damped collective mode within
the superconducting energy gap. It is suggested that these excitations are
relevant to high-Tc superconductors, close to the antiferromagnetic phase
boundary, and may explain some of the exotic features of the experimentally
observed spectral-density and neutron-scattering data.Comment: 5 jolly page
Numerical Renormalization Group Study of Kondo Effect in Unconventional Superconductors
Orbital degrees of freedom of a Cooper pair play an important role in the
unconventional superconductivity. To elucidate the orbital effect in the Kondo
problem, we investigated a single magnetic impurity coupled to Cooper pairs
with a () symmetry using the numerical
renormalization group method. It is found that the ground state is always a
spin doublet. The analytical solution for the strong coupling limit explicitly
shows that the orbital dynamics of the Cooper pair generates the spin 1/2 of
the ground state.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, JPSJ.sty, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
70 (2001) No. 1
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