13,598 research outputs found
Breakdown of the Wiedemann-Franz law in strongly-coupled electron-phonon system, application to the cuprates
With the superconducting cuprates in mind, a set of unitary transformations
was used to decouple electrons and phonons in the strong-coupling limit. While
phonons remain almost unrenormalised, electrons are transformed into itinerent
singlet and triplet bipolarons and thermally excited polarons. The
triplet/singlet exchange energy and the binding energy of the bipolarons are
thought to account for the spin and charge pseudogaps in the cuprates,
respectively. We calculated the Hall Lorenz number of the system to show that
the Wiedemann-Franz law breaks down due to the interference of the polaron and
bipolaron contributions to heat flow. The model provides a quantitative fit to
magnetotransport data in the cuprates. Furthermore we are able to extract the
phonon component of the thermal conductivity with the use of experimental data
and the model. Our results further validate the use of a charged Bose gas model
to describe normal and superconducting properties of unconventional
superconductors.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
Vortex and critical fields in charged Bose liquids and unconventional superconductors
A single vortex in the charged Bose gas (CBG) has a charged core and its
profile different from the vortex in neutral and BCS superfluids. Lower and
upper critical fields of CBG are discussed. The unusual resistive upper
critical field, Hc2(T), of many cuprates and a few other unconventional
superconductors is described as the Bose-Einstein condensation field of
preformed bosons-bipolarons. Its nonlinear temperature dependence follows from
the scaling arguments. Exceeding the Pauli paramagnetic limit is explained.
Controversy in the determination of Hc2(T) of cuprates from kinetic and
thermodynamic measurements is addressed in the framework of the bipolaron
theory.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, invited paper at the International Conference
'Vortex III', Crete (September 2003
Low temperature thermodynamics of charged bosons in a random potential and the specific heat of La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} below Tc
We propose a simple analytical form of the partition function for charged
bosons localised in a random potential and derive the consequent thermodynamics
below the superfluid transition temperature. In the low temperature limit, the
specific heat, C, depends on the localisation length exponent nu: C is linear
for nu1 we find C proportional to T^{1/nu}. This unusual
sub-linear temperature dependence of the specific heat has recently been
observed in La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} below Tc.Comment: Revtex, 6 pages, 4 postscript figure
D-wave Bose-Einstein condensation and the London penetration depth in superconducting cuprates
We show that bipolaron formation leads to a d-wave Bose-Einstein condensate
in cuprates. It is the bipolaron energy dispersion rather than a particular
pairing interaction which is responsible for the d-wave symmetry. The unusual
low-temperature dependence of the magnetic field penetration depth in cuprates
is explained by the localisation of bosons in the random potential. The
temperature dependence of the penetration depth is linear with positive or
negative slope depending on the random field profile.Comment: 4 pages (RevTeX), 4 figure
Complex curves and non-perturbative effects in c=1 string theory
We investigate a complex curve in the string theory which provides a
geometric interpretation for different kinds of D-branes. The curve is
constructed for a theory perturbed by a tachyon potential using its matrix
model formulation. The perturbation removes the degeneracy of the non-perturbed
curve and allows to identify its singularities with ZZ branes. Also, using the
constructed curve, we find non-perturbative corrections to the free energy and
elucidate their CFT origin.Comment: 8 pages, Contribution to the proceedings of RTN Workshop, Kolymbari,
Crete, Greece, 5-10 September 200
New Fundamental dHvA Frequency in Canonical Low-Dimensional Fermi Liquids
We show that a new fundamental period of dHvA oscillations, which
appears along with other ``forbidden'' combination frequencies in a multi-band
canonical Fermi-liquid, is very robust with respect to a finite smearing of
Landau levels and a background of non-quantized states. We analyse the
possibility of measuring small Fermi surface pockets with the use of the
``forbidden'' frequencies.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX 3.0, with 2 PS Figure
Quantum magnetic oscillations and angle-resolved photoemission from impurity bands in cuprate superconductors
Present-day angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has offered a
tremendous advance in the understanding of electron energy spectra in cuprate
superconductors and some related compounds. However, in high magnetic field,
magnetic quantum oscillations at low temperatures indicate the existence of
small electron (hole) Fermi pockets seemingly missing in ARPES of hole
(electron) doped cuprates. Here ARPES and quantum oscillations are reconciled
in the framework of an impurity band in the charge-transfer Mott-Hubbard
insulator
Normal state diamagnetism of charged bosons in cuprate superconductors
Normal state orbital diamagnetism of charged bosons quantitatively accounts
for recent high-resolution magnetometery results near and above the resistive
critical temperature Tc of superconducting cuprates. Our parameter-free
descriptions of normal state diamagnetism, Tc, upper critical fields and
specific heat anomalies unambiguously support the 3D Bose-Einstein condensation
at Tc of preformed real-space pairs with zero off-diagonal order parameter
above Tc, at variance with phase fluctuation (or vortex) scenarios of the
"normal" state of cuprates.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Twistor Approach to String Compactifications: a Review
We review a progress in obtaining the complete non-perturbative effective
action of type II string theory compactified on a Calabi-Yau manifold. This
problem is equivalent to understanding quantum corrections to the metric on the
hypermultiplet moduli space. We show how all these corrections, which include
D-brane and NS5-brane instantons, are incorporated in the framework of the
twistor approach, which provides a powerful mathematical description of
hyperkahler and quaternion-Kahler manifolds. We also present new insights on
S-duality, quantum mirror symmetry, connections to integrable models and
topological strings.Comment: 99 pages; minor corrections; journal versio
Isotope effects in high-Tc cuprate superconductors: Ultimate proof for bipolaron theory of superconductivity
Developing a theory of high-temperature superconductivity in copper oxides is
one of the outstanding problems in physics. Twenty-five years after its
discovery, no consensus on the microscopic theory has been reached despite
tremendous theoretical and experimental efforts. Attempts to understand this
problem are hindered by the subtle interplay among a few mechanisms and the
presence of several nearly degenerate and competing phases in these systems.
Here we provide unified parameter-free explanation of the observed
oxygen-isotope effects on the critical temperature, the magnetic-field
penetration depth, and on the normal-state pseudogap for underdoped cuprate
superconductors within the framework of the bipolaron theory compatible with
the strong Coulomb and Froehlich interactions, and with many other independent
observations in these highly polarizable doped insulators. Remarkably, we also
quantitatively explain measured critical temperatures and magnitudes of the
magnetic-field penetration depth. The present work thus represents an ultimate
proof of the bipolaron theory of high-temperature superconductivity, which
takes into account essential Coulomb and electron-phonon interactions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
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