11,528 research outputs found
From an insulating to a superfluid pair-bond liquid
We study an exchange coupled system of itinerant electrons and localized
fermion pairs resulting in a resonant pairing formation. This system inherently
contains resonating fermion pairs on bonds which lead to a superconducting
phase provided that long range phase coherence between their constituents can
be established. The prerequisite is that the resonating fermion pairs can
become itinerant. This is rendered possible through the emergence of two kinds
of bond-fermions: individual and composite fermions made of one individual
electron attached to a bound pair on a bond. If the strength of the exchange
coupling exceeds a certain value, the superconducting ground state undergoes a
quantum phase transition into an insulating pair-bond liquid state. The gap of
the superfluid phase thereby goes over continuously into a charge gap of the
insulator. The change-over from the superconducting to the insulating phase is
accompanied by a corresponding qualitative modification of the dispersion of
the two kinds of fermionic excitations. Using a bond operator formalism, we
derive the phase diagram of such a scenario together with the elementary
excitations characterizing the various phases as a function of the exchange
coupling and the temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Superfluid-insulator transition in a moving system of interacting bosons
We analyze stability of superfluid currents in a system of strongly
interacting ultra-cold atoms in an optical lattice. We show that such a system
undergoes a dynamic, irreversible phase transition at a critical phase gradient
that depends on the interaction strength between atoms. At commensurate
filling, the phase boundary continuously interpolates between the classical
modulation instability of a weakly interacting condensate and the equilibrium
quantum phase transition into a Mott insulator state at which the critical
current vanishes. We argue that quantum fluctuations smear the transition
boundary in low dimensional systems. Finally we discuss the implications to
realistic experiments.Comment: updated refernces and introduction, minor correction
Methodologies for Analyzing Equilibria in Wireless Games
Under certain assumptions in terms of information and models, equilibria
correspond to possible stable outcomes in conflicting or cooperative scenarios
where rational entities interact. For wireless engineers, it is of paramount
importance to be able to predict and even ensure such states at which the
network will effectively operate. In this article, we provide non-exhaustive
methodologies for characterizing equilibria in wireless games in terms of
existence, uniqueness, selection, and efficiency.Comment: To appear in IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, Sep. 200
Microscopic thickness determination of thin graphite films formed on SiC from quantized oscillation in reflectivity of low-energy electrons
Low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM) was used to measure the reflectivity of
low-energy electrons from graphitized SiC(0001). The reflectivity shows
distinct quantized oscillations as a function of the electron energy and
graphite thickness. Conduction bands in thin graphite films form discrete
energy levels whose wave vectors are normal to the surface. Resonance of the
incident electrons with these quantized conduction band states enhances
electrons to transmit through the film into the SiC substrate, resulting in
dips in the reflectivity. The dip positions are well explained using
tight-binding and first-principles calculations. The graphite thickness
distribution can be determined microscopically from LEEM reflectivity
measurements.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Agreement between methods of measurement with multiple observations per individual
Limits of agreement provide a straightforward and intuitive approach to agreement between different methods for measuring the same quantity. When pairs of observations using the two methods are independent, i.e., on different subjects, the calculations are very simple and straightforward. Some authors collect repeated data, either as repeated pairs of measurements on the same subject, whose true value of the measured quantity may be changing, or more than one measurement by one or both methods of an unchanging underlying quantity. In this paper we describe methods for analysing such clustered observations, both when the underlying quantity is assumed to be changing and when it is not
Hanbury Brown-Twiss Interferometry for Fractional and Integer Mott Phases
Hanbury-Brown-Twiss interferometry (HBTI) is used to study integer and
fractionally filled Mott Insulator (MI) phases in period-2 optical
superlattices. In contrast to the quasimomentum distribution, this second order
interferometry pattern exhibits high contrast fringes in the it insulating
phases. Our detailed study of HBTI suggests that this interference pattern
signals the various superfluid-insulator transitions and therefore can be used
as a practical method to determine the phase diagram of the system. We find
that in the presence of a confining potential the insulating phases become
robust as they exist for a finite range of atom numbers. Furthermore, we show
that in the trapped case the HBTI interferogram signals the formation of the MI
domains and probes the shell structure of the system.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figure
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