3,064 research outputs found
Graphene under the influence of Aharonov-Bohm flux and constant magnetic field
Investigation of real two-dimensional systems with Dirac-like electronic
behavior under the influence of magnetic field is challenging and leads to many
interesting physical results. In this paper we study 2D graphene model with a
particular form of magnetic field as a superposition of a homogeneous field and
an Aharonov-Bohm vortex. For this configuration, electronic wave functions and
energy spectrum were obtained and it was shown that the magnetic Aharonov-Bohm
vortex plays the role of a charge impurity. As a demonstration of vacuum
properties of the system, vacuum current, as well as an electric current, is
calculated and their representation for particular limiting cases of magnetic
field is obtained
Laser-induced topological transitions in phosphorene with inversion symmetry
Recent ab initio calculations and experiments reported
insulating-semimetallic phase transitions in multilayer phosphorene under a
perpendicular dc field, pressure or doping, as a possible route to realize
topological phases. In this work, we show that even a monolayer phosphorene may
undergo Lifshitz transitions toward semimetallic and topological insulating
phases, provided it is rapidly driven by in-plane time-periodic laser fields.
Based on a four-orbital tight-binding description, we give an
inversion-symmetry-based prescription in order to apprehend the topology of the
photon-renormalized band structure, up to the second order in the
high-frequency limit. Apart from the initial band insulating behavior, two
additional phases are thus identified. A semimetallic phase with massless Dirac
electrons may be induced by linear polarized fields, whereas elliptic polarized
fields are likely to drive the material into an anomalous quantum Hall phase.Comment: Includes Supplemental Materia
Dynamical and Reversible Control of Topological Spin Textures
Recent observations of topological spin textures brought spintronics one step
closer to new magnetic memories. Nevertheless, the existence of Skyrmions, as
well as their stabilization, require very specific intrinsic magnetic
properties which are usually fixed in magnets. Here we address the possibility
to dynamically control their intrinsic magnetic interactions by varying the
strength of a high-frequency laser field. It is shown that drastic changes can
be induced in the antiferromagnetic exchange interactions and the latter can
even be reversed to become ferromagnetic, provided the direct exchange is
already non-negligible in equilibrium as predicted, for example, in Si doped
with C, Sn, or Pb adatoms. In the presence of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interactions, this enables us to tune features of ferromagnetic Skyrmions such
as their radius, making them easier to stabilize. Alternatively, such
topological spin textures can occur in frustrated triangular lattices. Then, we
demonstrate that a high-frequency laser field can induce dynamical frustration
in antiferromagnets, where the degree of frustration can subsequently be tuned
suitably to drive the material toward a Skyrmionic phase
Long-term planning versus short-term planning in the asymptotical location problem
Given the probability measure over the given region , we consider the optimal location of a set composed by
points \Om in order to minimize the average distance \Sigma\mapsto \int_\Om
\dist(x,\Sigma) d\nu (the classical optimal facility location problem). The
paper compares two strategies to find optimal configurations: the long-term one
which consists in placing all points at once in an optimal position, and
the short-term one which consists in placing the points one by one adding at
each step at most one point and preserving the configuration built at previous
steps. We show that the respective optimization problems exhibit qualitatively
different asymptotic behavior as , although the optimization costs
in both cases have the same asymptotic orders of vanishing.Comment: for more pictures and some movies as well, see
http://www.sissa.it/~brancoli
Excitonic Instability and Pseudogap Formation in Nodal Line Semimetal ZrSiS
Electron correlation effects are studied in ZrSiS using a combination of
first-principles and model approaches. We show that basic electronic properties
of ZrSiS can be described within a two-dimensional lattice model of two nested
square lattices. High degree of electron-hole symmetry characteristic for ZrSiS
is one of the key features of this model. Having determined model parameters
from first-principles calculations, we then explicitly take electron-electron
interactions into account and show that at moderately low temperatures ZrSiS
exhibits excitonic instability, leading to the formation of a pseudogap in the
electronic spectrum. The results can be understood in terms of
Coulomb-interaction-assisted pairing of electrons and holes reminiscent to that
of an excitonic insulator. Our finding allows us to provide a physical
interpretation to the unusual mass enhancement of charge carriers in ZrSiS
recently observed experimentally.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Final versio
Magnetic ionization-thermal instability
Linear analysis of the stability of diffuse clouds in the cold neutral medium
with uniform magnetic field is performed. We consider that gas in equilibrium
state is heated by cosmic rays, X-rays and electronic photoeffect on the
surface of dust grains, and it is cooled by the collisional excitation of fine
levels of the CII. Ionization by cosmic rays and radiative recombinations is
taken into account. A dispersion equation is solved analytically in the
limiting cases of small and large wave numbers, as well as numerically in the
general case. In particular cases the dispersion equation describes thermal
instability of Field (1965) and ionization-coupled acoustic instability of
Flannery and Press (1979). We pay our attention to magnetosonic waves arising
in presence of magnetic field, in thermally stable region,
K and density n\lessapprox 10^3\,\mbox{cm}^{-3}. We have shown that these
modes can be unstable in the isobarically stable medium. The instability
mechanism is similar to the mechanism of ionization-coupled acoustic
instability. We determine maximum growth rates and critical wavelengths of the
instability of magnetosonic waves depending on gas temperature, magnetic field
strength and the direction of wave vector with respect to the magnetic field
lines. The minimum growth time of the unstable slow magnetosonic waves in
diffuse clouds is of Myr, minimum and the most unstable wavelengths lie
in ranges and pc, respectively. We discuss the application
of considered instability to the formation of small-scale structures and the
generation of MHD turbulence in the cold neutral medium.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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