2,487 research outputs found
Ferromagnetism in UGe2 : A microscopic model
Anderson lattice model is used to rationalize the principal features of the
heavy fermion compound UGe2 by means of the generalized Gutzwiller approach
(the SGA method). This microscopic approach successfully reproduces magnetic
and electronic properties of this material, in a qualitative agreement with
experimental findings from the magnetization measurements, the neutron
scattering, and the de Haas-van Alphen oscillations. Most importantly, it
explains the appearance, sequence, character, and evolution in an applied
magnetic field of the observed in UGe2 ferro- and, para-magnetic phases as an
effect of a competition between the f-f electrons Coulomb interaction energy
and f-conduction electrons kinetic energy (hybridization)Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Criticalities in the itinerant ferromagnet UGe
We provide a microscopic description of the magnetic properties of UGe
and in particular, of its both classical and quantum critical behavior. Namely,
we account for all the critical points: the critical ending point (CEP) at the
metamagnetic phase transition, the tricritical point, and the quantum critical
end point at the ferromagnetic to paramagnetic phase transition. Their position
agrees quantitatively with experiment. Additionally, we predict that the
metamagnetic CEP can be traced down to zero temperature and becomes quantum
critical point by a small decrease of both the total electron concentration and
the external pressure. The system properties are then determined by the quantum
critical fluctuations appearing near the instability point of the Fermi surface
topology.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, PACS number: 71.27.+a, 75.30.Kz, 71.10.-
Model of hard spheroplatelets near a hard wall
A system of hard spheroplatelets near an impenetrable wall is studied in the
low-density Onsager approximation. Spheroplatelets have optimal shape between
rods and plates, and the direct transition from the isotropic to biaxial
nematic phase is present. A simple local approximation for the one-particle
distribution function is used. Analytical results for the surface tension and
the entropy contributions are derived. The density and the order-parameter
profiles near the wall are calculated. The preferred orientation of the short
molecule axes is perpendicular to the wall. Biaxiality close to the wall can
appear only if the phase is biaxial in the bulk.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, revised version published in PR
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