3,796 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
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of band tails in lightly doped cuprates
We amend ab initio strongly-correlated band structures by taking into account
the band-tailing phenomenon in doped charge-transfer Mott-Hubbard insulators.
We show that the photoemission from band tails accounts for sharp
"quasi-particle" peaks, rapid loss of their intensities in some directions of
the Brillouin zone ("Fermi-arcs") and high-energy "waterfall" anomalies as a
consequence of matrix-element effects of disorder-localised states in the
charge-transfer gap of doped cuprates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Comment on `Experimental and Theoretical Constraints of Bipolaronic Superconductivity in High Materials: An Impossibility'
We show that objections raised by Chakraverty (Phys. Rev. Lett. 81,
433 (1998)) to the bipolaron model of superconducting cuprates are the result
of an incorrect approximation for the bipolaron energy spectrum and misuse of
the bipolaron theory. The consideration, which takes into account the multiband
energy structure of bipolarons and the unscreened electron-phonon interaction
clearly indicates that cuprates are in the Bose-Einstein condensation regime
with mobile charged bosons.Comment: 1 page, no figure
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
Time-dependent backgrounds of 2D string theory: Non-perturbative effects
We study the non-perturbative corrections (NPC) to the partition function of
a compactified 2D string theory in a time-dependent background generated by a
tachyon source. The sine-Liouville deformation of the theory is a particular
case of such a background. We calculate the leading as well as the subleading
NPC using the dual description of the string theory as matrix quantum
mechanics. As in the minimal string theories, the NPC are classified by the
double points of a complex curve. We calculate them by two different methods:
by solving Toda equation and by evaluating the quasiclassical fermion wave
functions. We show that the result can be expressed in terms of correlation
functions of the bosonic field associated with the tachyon source and identify
the leading and the subleading corrections as the contributions from the
one-point (disk) and two-point (annulus) correlation functions.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figure
Reply to "Comment on 'Origin of combination frequencies in quantum magnetic oscillations of two-dimensional multiband metals' " by A.S. Alexandrov and A.M. Bratkovsky [cond-mat/0207173]
In their comment on the paper (Phys. Rev. B 65, 153403 (2002);
cond-mat/0110154), Alexandrov and Bratkovsky (cond-mat/0207173) argue that they
correctly took into account the chemical potential oscillations in their
analytical theory of combination frequencies in multiband low-dimensional
metals by expanding the free energy in powers of the chemical potential
oscillations. In this reply, we show that this claim contradicts their original
paper (Phys. Rev. B 63, 033105 (2001)). We demonstrate that the condition given
for the expansion is mathematically incorrect. The correct condition allows to
understand the limits of validity of the analytical theory.Comment: 4 page
High Temperature Superconductivity: the explanation
Soon after the discovery of the first high temperature superconductor by
Georg Bednorz and Alex Mueller in 1986 the late Sir Nevill Mott answering his
own question "Is there an explanation?" [Nature v 327 (1987) 185] expressed a
view that the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of small bipolarons, predicted
by us in 1981, could be the one. Several authors then contemplated BEC of real
space tightly bound pairs, but with a purely electronic mechanism of pairing
rather than with the electron-phonon interaction (EPI). However, a number of
other researchers criticized the bipolaron (or any real-space pairing) scenario
as incompatible with some angle-resolved photoemission spectra (ARPES), with
experimentally determined effective masses of carriers and unconventional
symmetry of the superconducting order parameter in cuprates. Since then the
controversial issue of whether the electron-phonon interaction (EPI) is crucial
for high-temperature superconductivity or weak and inessential has been one of
the most challenging problems of contemporary condensed matter physics. Here I
outline some developments in the bipolaron theory suggesting that the true
origin of high-temperature superconductivity is found in a proper combination
of strong electron-electron correlations with a significant finite-range
(Froehlich) EPI, and that the theory is fully compatible with the key
experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, invited comment to Physica Script
Hamiltonian Analysis of non-chiral Plebanski Theory and its Generalizations
We consider non-chiral, full Lorentz group-based Plebanski formulation of
general relativity in its version that utilizes the Lagrange multiplier field
Phi with "internal" indices. The Hamiltonian analysis of this version of the
theory turns out to be simpler than in the previously considered in the
literature version with Phi carrying spacetime indices. We then extend the
Hamiltonian analysis to a more general class of theories whose action contains
scalars invariants constructed from Phi. Such theories have recently been
considered in the context of unification of gravity with other forces. We show
that these more general theories have six additional propagating degrees of
freedom as compared to general relativity, something that has not been
appreciated in the literature treating them as being not much different from
GR.Comment: 10 page
Coherent `ab' and `c' transport theory of high- cuprates
We propose a microscopic theory of the `'-axis and in-plane transport of
copper oxides based on the bipolaron theory and the Boltzmann kinetics. The
fundamental relationship between the anisotropy and the spin susceptibility is
derived, . The
temperature and doping dependence of the in-plane, and
out-of-plane, resistivity and the spin susceptibility,
are found in a remarkable agreement with the experimental data in underdoped,
optimally and overdoped for the entire temperature
regime from up to . The normal state gap is explained and its
doping and temperature dependence is clarified.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 3 figures available upon reques
S-duality in Twistor Space
In type IIB string compactifications on a Calabi-Yau threefold, the
hypermultiplet moduli space must carry an isometric action of the modular
group SL(2,Z), inherited from the S-duality symmetry of type IIB string theory
in ten dimensions. We investigate how this modular symmetry is realized at the
level of the twistor space of , and construct a general class of
SL(2,Z)-invariant quaternion-Kahler metrics with two commuting isometries,
parametrized by a suitably covariant family of holomorphic transition
functions. This family should include corrected by D3-D1-D(-1)-instantons
(with fivebrane corrections ignored) and, after taking a suitable rigid limit,
the Coulomb branch of five-dimensional N=2 gauge theories compactified on a
torus, including monopole string instantons. These results allow us to
considerably simplify the derivation of the mirror map between type IIA and IIB
fields in the sector where only D1-D(-1)-instantons are retained.Comment: 29 pages, 1 figur
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