308 research outputs found
Observation of Microlensing towards the Galactic Spiral Arms. EROS II 2 year survey
We present the analysis of the light curves of 8.5 million stars observed
during two seasons by EROS (Experience de Recherche d'Objets Sombres), in the
galactic plane away from the bulge. Three stars have been found that exhibit
luminosity variations compatible with gravitational microlensing effects due to
unseen objects. The corresponding optical depth, averaged over four directions,
is 0.38 (+0.53, -0.15) 10^{-6}. All three candidates have long Einstein radius
crossing times ( 70 to 100 days). For one of them, the lack of evidence
for a parallax or a source size effect enabled us to constrain the lens-source
% geometric configuration. Another candidate displays a modulation of the
magnification, which is compatible with the lensing of a binary source.
The interpretation of the optical depths inferred from these observations is
hindered by the imperfect knowledge of the distance to the target stars. Our
measurements are compatible with expectations from simple galactic models under
reasonable assumptions on the target distances.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, accepted by A&A in Aug 9
The alpha-gamma transition of Cerium is entropy-driven
We emphasize, on the basis of experimental data and theoretical calculations,
that the entropic stabilization of the gamma-phase is the main driving force of
the alpha-gamma transition of cerium in a wide temperature range below the
critical point. Using a formulation of the total energy as a functional of the
local density and of the f-orbital local Green's functions, we perform
dynamical mean-field theory calculations within a new implementation based on
the multiple LMTO method, which allows to include semi-core states. Our results
are consistent with the experimental energy differences and with the
qualitative picture of an entropy-driven transition, while also confirming the
appearance of a stabilization energy of the alpha phase as the quasiparticle
Kondo resonance develops.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Brainstem fMRI signaling of surprise across different types of deviant stimuli
Detection of deviant stimuli is crucial to orient and adapt our behavior. Previous work shows that deviant stimuli elicit phasic activation of the locus coeruleus (LC), which releases noradrenaline and controls central arousal. However, it is unclear whether the detection of behaviorally relevant deviant stimuli selectively triggers LC responses or other neuromodulatory systems (dopamine, serotonin, and acetylcholine). We combine human functional MRI (fMRI) recordings optimized for brainstem imaging with pupillometry to perform a mapping of deviant-related responses in subcortical structures. Participants have to detect deviant items in a "local-global" paradigm that distinguishes between deviance based on the stimulus probability and the sequence structure. fMRI responses to deviant stimuli are distributed in many cortical areas. Both types of deviance elicit responses in the pupil, LC, and other neuromodulatory systems. Our results reveal that the detection of task-relevant deviant items recruits the same multiple subcortical systems across computationally different types of deviance
Plane-wave based electronic structure calculations for correlated materials using dynamical mean-field theory and projected local orbitals
The description of realistic strongly correlated systems has recently
advanced through the combination of density functional theory in the local
density approximation (LDA) and dynamical mean field theory (DMFT). This
LDA+DMFT method is able to treat both strongly correlated insulators and
metals. Several interfaces between LDA and DMFT have been used, such as (N-th
order) Linear Muffin Tin Orbitals or Maximally localized Wannier Functions.
Such schemes are however either complex in use or additional simplifications
are often performed (i.e., the atomic sphere approximation). We present an
alternative implementation of LDA+DMFT, which keeps the precision of the
Wannier implementation, but which is lighter. It relies on the projection of
localized orbitals onto a restricted set of Kohn-Sham states to define the
correlated subspace. The method is implemented within the Projector Augmented
Wave (PAW) and within the Mixed Basis Pseudopotential (MBPP) frameworks. This
opens the way to electronic structure calculations within LDA+DMFT for more
complex structures with the precision of an all-electron method. We present an
application to two correlated systems, namely SrVO3 and beta-NiS (a
charge-transfer material), including ligand states in the basis-set. The
results are compared to calculations done with Maximally Localized Wannier
functions, and the physical features appearing in the orbitally resolved
spectral functions are discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 17 figure
A Self-consistent DFT+DMFT scheme in the Projector Augmented Wave : Applications to Cerium, Ce2O3 and Pu2O3 with the Hubbard I solver and comparison to DFT+U
An implementation of full self-consistency over the electronic density in the
DFT+DMFT framework on the basis of a plane wave-projector augmented wave (PAW)
DFT code is presented. It allows for an accurate calculation of the total
energy in DFT+DMFT within a plane wave approach. In contrast to frameworks
based on the maximally localized Wannier function, the method is easily applied
to f electron systems, such as cerium, cerium oxide (Ce2O3) and plutonium oxide
(Pu2O3). In order to have a correct and physical calculation of the energy
terms, we find that the calculation of the self-consistent density is
mandatory. The formalism is general and does not depend on the method used to
solve the impurity model. Calculations are carried out within the Hubbard I
approximation, which is fast to solve, and gives a good description of strongly
correlated insulators. We compare the DFT+DMFT and DFT+U solutions, and
underline the qualitative differences of their converged densities. We
emphasize that in contrast to DFT+U, DFT+DMFT does not break the spin and
orbital symmetry. As a consequence, DFT+DMFT implies, on top of a better
physical description of correlated metals and insulators, a reduced occurrence
of unphysical metastable solutions in correlated insulators in comparison to
DFT+U.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version
of an article accepted for publication in Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matter. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in
this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of
Record is available online at doi: 10.1088/0953-8984/24/7/07560
Self-consistency over the charge-density in dynamical mean-field theory: a linear muffin-tin implementation and some physical implications
We present a simple implementation of the dynamical mean-field theory
approach to the electronic structure of strongly correlated materials. This
implementation achieves full self-consistency over the charge density, taking
into account correlation-induced changes to the total charge density and
effective Kohn-Sham Hamiltonian. A linear muffin-tin orbital basis-set is used,
and the charge density is computed from moments of the many body
momentum-distribution matrix. The calculation of the total energy is also
considered, with a proper treatment of high-frequency tails of the Green's
function and self-energy. The method is illustrated on two materials with
well-localized 4f electrons, insulating cerium sesquioxide Ce2O3 and the
gamma-phase of metallic cerium, using the Hubbard-I approximation to the
dynamical mean-field self-energy. The momentum-integrated spectral function and
momentum-resolved dispersion of the Hubbard bands are calculated, as well as
the volume-dependence of the total energy. We show that full self-consistency
over the charge density, taking into account its modification by strong
correlations, can be important for the computation of both thermodynamical and
spectral properties, particularly in the case of the oxide material.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures (submitted in The Physical Review B
Study of the volume and spin collapse in orthoferrite LuFeO_3 using LDA+U
Rare earth (R) orthoferrites RFeO_3 exhibit large volume transitions
associated with a spin collapse. We present here ab initio calculations on
LuFeO_3. We show that taking into account the strong correlation among the
Fe-3d electrons is necessary. Indeed, with the LDA+U method in the Projector
Augmented Wave (PAW), we are able to describe the isostructural phase
transition at 50 GPa, as well as a volume discontinuity of 6.0% at the
transition and the considerable reduction of the magnetic moment on the Fe
ions. We further investigate the effect of the variation of U and J and find a
linear dependence of the transition pressure on these parameters. We give an
interpretation for the non-intuitive effect of J. This emphasizes the need for
a correct determination of these parameters especially when the LDA+U is
applied to systems (e.g in geophysical investigations) where the transition
pressure is a priori unknown
Consistent LDA'+DMFT approach to electronic structure of transition metal oxides: charge transfer insulators and correlated metals
We discuss the recently proposed LDA'+DMFT approach providing consistent
parameter free treatment of the so called double counting problem arising
within the LDA+DMFT hybrid computational method for realistic strongly
correlated materials. In this approach the local exchange-correlation portion
of electron-electron interaction is excluded from self consistent LDA
calculations for strongly correlated electronic shells, e.g. d-states of
transition metal compounds. Then the corresponding double counting term in
LDA+DMFT Hamiltonian is consistently set in the local Hartree (fully localized
limit - FLL) form of the Hubbard model interaction term. We present the results
of extensive LDA'+DMFT calculations of densities of states, spectral densities
and optical conductivity for most typical representatives of two wide classes
of strongly correlated systems in paramagnetic phase: charge transfer
insulators (MnO, CoO and NiO) and strongly correlated metals (SrVO3 and
Sr2RuO4). It is shown that for NiO and CoO systems LDA'+DMFT qualitatively
improves the conventional LDA+DMFT results with FLL type of double counting,
where CoO and NiO were obtained to be metals. We also include in our
calculations transition metal 4s-states located near the Fermi level missed in
previous LDA+DMFT studies of these monooxides. General agreement with optical
and X-ray experiments is obtained. For strongly correlated metals
LDA+DMFT results agree well with earlier LDA+DMFT calculations and
existing experiments. However, in general LDA'+DMFT results give better
quantitative agreement with experimental data for band gap sizes and oxygen
states positions, as compared to the conventional LDA+DMFT.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 1 table. In v2 there some additional
clarifications are include
Correlated hopping of electrons: Effect on the Brinkman-Rice transition and the stability of metallic ferromagnetism
We study the Hubbard model with bond-charge interaction (`correlated
hopping') in terms of the Gutzwiller wave function. We show how to express the
Gutzwiller expectation value of the bond-charge interaction in terms of the
correlated momentum-space occupation. This relation is valid in all spatial
dimensions. We find that in infinite dimensions, where the Gutzwiller
approximation becomes exact, the bond-charge interaction lowers the critical
Hubbard interaction for the Brinkman-Rice metal-insulator transition. The
bond-charge interaction also favors ferromagnetic transitions, especially if
the density of states is not symmetric and has a large spectral weight below
the Fermi energy.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; minor changes, published versio
Electronic Structure Calculations with LDA+DMFT
The LDA+DMFT method is a very powerful tool for gaining insight into the
physics of strongly correlated materials. It combines traditional ab-initio
density-functional techniques with the dynamical mean-field theory. The core
aspects of the method are (i) building material-specific Hubbard-like many-body
models and (ii) solving them in the dynamical mean-field approximation. Step
(i) requires the construction of a localized one-electron basis, typically a
set of Wannier functions. It also involves a number of approximations, such as
the choice of the degrees of freedom for which many-body effects are explicitly
taken into account, the scheme to account for screening effects, or the form of
the double-counting correction. Step (ii) requires the dynamical mean-field
solution of multi-orbital generalized Hubbard models. Here central is the
quantum-impurity solver, which is also the computationally most demanding part
of the full LDA+DMFT approach. In this chapter I will introduce the core
aspects of the LDA+DMFT method and present a prototypical application.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures. Chapter of "Many-Electron Approaches in Physics,
Chemistry and Mathematics: A Multidisciplinary View", eds. V. Bach and L.
Delle Site, Springer 201
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