24,724 research outputs found
Raising the critical temperature by disorder in unconventional superconductors mediated by spin fluctuations
We propose a mechanism whereby disorder can enhance the transition
temperature Tc of an unconventional superconductor with pairing driven by
exchange of spin fluctuations. The theory is based on a self-consistent real
space treatment of pairing in the disordered one-band Hubbard model. It has
been demonstrated before that impurities can enhance pairing by softening the
spin fluctuations locally; here, we consider the competing effect of
pair-breaking by the screened Coulomb potential also present. We show that,
depending on the impurity potential strength and proximity to magnetic order,
this mechanism results in a weakening of the disorder-dependent Tc-suppression
rate expected from Abrikosov-Gor'kov theory, or even in disorder-generated Tc
enhancements.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures + Supplementary Materia
Anisotropy study of multiferroicity in the pyroxene NaFeGeO
We present a study of the anisotropy of the dielectric, magnetic and
magnetoelastic properties of the multiferroic clinopyroxene NaFeGeO.
Pyroelectric currents, dielectric constants and magnetic susceptibilities as
well as the thermal expansion and the magnetostriction were examined on large
synthetic single crystals of NaFeGeO. The spontaneous electric
polarization detected below K in an
antiferromagnetically ordered state ( K) is mainly lying
within the plane with a small component along , indicating a triclinic
symmetry of the multiferroic phase of NaFeGeO. The electric
polarization can be strongly modified by applying magnetic fields along
different directions. We derive detailed magnetic-field versus temperature
phase diagrams and identify three multiferroic low-temperature phases, which
are separated by a non-ferroelectric, antiferromagnetically ordered state from
the paramagnetic high-temperature phase.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. (minor modifications and corrections of the
text
Bursts and Shocks in a Continuum Shell Model
We study a "burst" event, i. e. the evolution of an initial condition having
support only in a finite interval of k-space, in the continuum shell model due
to Parisi. We show that the continuum equation without forcing or dissipation
can be explicitly written in characteristic form and that the right and left
moving parts can be solved exactly. When this is supplemented by the
appropriate shock condition it is possible to find the asymptotic form of the
burst.Comment: 15 pages, 2 eps figures included, Latex 2e. Contribution to the
proceedings of the conference: Disorder and Chaos, in honour of Giovanni
Paladin, September 22-24, 1997, in Rom
Local modulations of the spin-fluctuation mediated pairing interaction by impurities in d-wave superconductors
We present a self-consistent real space formulation of spin-fluctuation
mediated d-wave pairing. By calculating all relevant inhomogeneous spin and
charge susceptibilities in real space within the random phase approximation
(RPA), we obtain the effective pairing interaction and study its spatial
dependence near both local potential and hopping impurities. A remarkably large
enhancement of the pairing interaction may be obtained near the impurity site.
We discuss the relevance of our result to inhomogeneities observed by scanning
tunneling spectroscopy on the surface of cuprate superconductors.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Superconducting phase diagram of itinerant antiferromagnets
We study the phase diagram of the Hubbard model in the weak-coupling limit
for coexisting spin-density-wave order and spin-fluctuation-mediated
superconductivity. Both longitudinal and transverse spin fluctuations
contribute significantly to the effective interaction potential, which creates
Cooper pairs of the quasi-particles of the antiferromagnetic metallic state. We
find a dominant -wave solution in both electron- and hole-doped
cases. In the quasi-spin triplet channel, the longitudinal fluctuations give
rise to an effective attraction supporting a -wave gap, but are overcome by
repulsive contributions from the transverse fluctuations which disfavor
-wave pairing compared to . The sub-leading pair instability is
found to be in the -wave channel, but complex admixtures of and are
not energetically favored since their nodal structures coincide. Inclusion of
interband pairing, in which each fermion in the Cooper pair belongs to a
different spin-density-wave band, is considered for a range of electron dopings
in the regime of well-developed magnetic order. We demonstrate that these
interband pairing gaps, which are non-zero in the magnetic state, must have the
same parity under inversion as the normal intraband gaps. The self-consistent
solution to the full system of five coupled gap equations give intraband and
interband pairing gaps of structure and similar gap magnitude. In
conclusion, the gap dominates for both hole and electron doping
inside the spin-density-wave phase.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Chiral Susceptibility in Hard Thermal Loop Approximation
The static and dynamic chiral susceptibilities in the quark-gluon plasma are
calculated within the lowest order perturbative QCD at finite temperature and
the Hard Thermal Loop resummation technique using an effective quark
propagator. After regularisation of ultraviolet divergences, the Hard Thermal
Loop results are compared to QCD lattice simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, revised version, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Universality of scanning tunneling microscopy in cuprate superconductors
We consider the problem of local tunneling into cuprate superconductors,
combining model based calculations for the superconducting order parameter with
wavefunction information obtained from first principles electronic structure.
For some time it has been proposed that scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)
spectra do not reflect the properties of the superconducting layer in the
CuO plane directly beneath the STM tip, but rather a weighted sum of
spatially proximate states determined by the details of the tunneling process.
These "filter" ideas have been countered with the argument that similar
conductance patterns have been seen around impurities and charge ordered states
in systems with atomically quite different barrier layers. Here we use a
recently developed Wannier function based method to calculate topographies,
spectra, conductance maps and normalized conductance maps close to impurities.
We find that it is the local planar Cu Wannier function,
qualitatively similar for many systems, that controls the form of the tunneling
spectrum and the spatial patterns near perturbations. We explain how, despite
the fact that STM observables depend on the materials-specific details of the
tunneling process and setup parameters, there is an overall universality in the
qualitative features of conductance spectra. In particular, we discuss why STM
results on BiSrCaCuO and CaNaCuOCl are
essentially identical
Influence of seating styles on head and pelvic vertical movement symmetry in horses ridden at trot
Detailed knowledge of how a rider’s seating style and riding on a circle influences the movement symmetry of the horse’s head and pelvis may aid rider and trainer in an early recognition of low grade lameness. Such knowledge is also important during both subjective and objective lameness evaluations in the ridden horse in a clinical setting. In this study, inertial sensors were used to assess how different rider seating styles may influence head and pelvic movement symmetry in horses trotting in a straight line and on the circle in both directions. A total of 26 horses were subjected to 15 different conditions at trot: three unridden conditions and 12 ridden conditions where the rider performed three different seating styles (rising trot, sitting trot and two point seat). Rising trot induced systematic changes in movement symmetry of the horses. The most prominent effect was decreased pelvic rise that occurred as the rider was actively rising up in the stirrups, thus creating a downward momentum counteracting the horses push off. This mimics a push off lameness in the hindlimb that is in stance when the rider sits down in the saddle during the rising trot. On the circle, the asymmetries induced by rising trot on the correct diagonal counteracted the circle induced asymmetries, rendering the horse more symmetrical. This finding offers an explanation to the equestrian tradition of rising on the ‘correct diagonal.’ In horses with small pre-existing movement asymmetries, the asymmetry induced by rising trot, as well as the circular track, attenuated or reduced the horse’s baseline asymmetry, depending on the sitting diagonal and direction on the circle. A push off hindlimb lameness would be expected to increase when the rider sits during the lame hindlimb stance whereas an impact hindlimb lameness would be expected to decrease. These findings suggest that the rising trot may be useful for identifying the type of lameness during subjective lameness assessment of hindlimb lameness. This theory needs to be studied further in clinically lame horses
Mass Expansions of Screened Perturbation Theory
The thermodynamics of massless phi^4-theory is studied within screened
perturbation theory (SPT). In this method the perturbative expansion is
reorganized by adding and subtracting a mass term in the Lagrangian. We
analytically calculate the pressure and entropy to three-loop order and the
screening mass to two-loop order, expanding in powers of m/T. The truncated
m/T-expansion results are compared with numerical SPT results for the pressure,
entropy and screening mass which are accurate to all orders in m/T. It is shown
that the m/T-expansion converges quickly and provides an accurate description
of the thermodynamic functions for large values of the coupling constant.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figure
Superconducting Junctions with Ferromagnetic, Antiferromagnetic or Charge-Density-Wave Interlayers
Spectra and spin structures of Andreev interface states and the Josephson
current are investigated theoretically in junctions between clean
superconductors (SC) with ordered interlayers. The Josephson current through
the ferromagnet-insulator-ferromagnet interlayer can exhibit a nonmonotonic
dependence on the misorientation angle. The characteristic behavior takes place
if the pi state is the equilibrium state of the junction in the particular case
of parallel magnetizations. We find a novel channel of quasiparticle reflection
(Q reflection) from the simplest two-sublattice antiferromagnet (AF) on a
bipartite lattice. As a combined effect of Andreev and Q reflections, Andreev
states arise at the AF/SC interface. When the Q reflection dominates the
specular one, Andreev bound states have almost zero energy on AF/ s-wave SC
interfaces, whereas they lie near the edge of the continuous spectrum for
AF/d-wave SC boundaries. For an s-wave SC/AF/s-wave SC junction, the bound
states are found to split and carry the supercurrent. Our analytical results
are based on a novel quasiclassical approach, which applies to interfaces
involving itinerant antiferromagnets. Similar effects can take place on
interfaces of superconductors with charge density wave materials (CDW),
including the possible d-density wave state (DDW) of the cuprates.Comment: LT24 conference proceeding, 2 pages, 1 figur
- …