76,343 research outputs found
Electronic structure of YbB: Is it a Topological Insulator or not?
To resolve the controversial issue of the topological nature of the
electronic structure of YbB, we have made a combined study using density
functional theory (DFT) and angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES).
Accurate determination of the low energy band topology in DFT requires the use
of modified Becke-Johnson exchange potential incorporating the spin-orbit
coupling and the on-site Coulomb interaction of Yb electrons as large
as 7 eV. We have double-checked the DFT result with the more precise GW band
calculation. ARPES is done with the non-polar (110) surface termination to
avoid band bending and quantum well confinement that have confused ARPES
spectra taken on the polar (001) surface termination. Thereby we show
definitively that YbB has a topologically trivial B 2-Yb 5
semiconductor band gap, and hence is a non-Kondo non-topological insulator
(TI). In agreement with theory, ARPES shows pure divalency for Yb and a -
band gap of 0.3 eV, which clearly rules out both of the previous scenarios of
- band inversion Kondo TI and - band inversion non-Kondo TI. We
have also examined the pressure-dependent electronic structure of YbB,
and found that the high pressure phase is not a Kondo TI but a
\emph{p}-\emph{d} overlap semimetal.Comment: The main text is 6 pages with 4 figures, and the supplementary
information contains 6 figures. 11 pages, 10 figures in total To be appeared
in Phys. Rev. Lett. (Online publication is around March 16 if no delays.
Nuclear Modification to Parton Distribution Functions and Parton Saturation
We introduce a generalized definition of parton distribution functions (PDFs)
for a more consistent all-order treatment of power corrections. We present a
new set of modified DGLAP evolution equations for nuclear PDFs, and show that
the resummed -type of leading nuclear size enhanced power
corrections significantly slow down the growth of gluon density at small-.
We discuss the relation between the calculated power corrections and the
saturation phenomena.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of QM200
Metal-insulator (fermion-boson)-crossover origin of pseudogap phase of cuprates I: anomalous heat conductivity, insulator resistivity boundary, nonlinear entropy
Among all experimental observations of cuprate physics, the
metal-insulator-crossover (MIC), seen in the pseudogap (PG) region of the
temperature-doping phase diagram of copper-oxides under a strong magnetic
field, when the superconductivity is suppressed, is most likely the most
intriguing one. Since it was expected that the PG-normal state for these
materials, as for conventional superconductors, is conducting. This MIC,
revealed in such phenomena as heat conductivity downturn, anomalous Lorentz
ratio, insulator resistivity boundary, nonlinear entropy, resistivity
temperature upturn, insulating ground state, nematicity- and stripe-phases and
Fermi pockets, unambiguously indicates on the insulating normal state, from
which the high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) appears. In the present work
(article I), we discuss the MIC phenomena mentioned in the title of article.
The second work (article II) will be devoted to discussion of other listed
above MIC phenomena and also to interpretation of the recent observations in
the hidden magnetic order and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments
spin and charge fluctuations as the intra PG and HTS pair ones. We find that
all these MIC (called in the literature as non-Fermi liquid) phenomena can be
obtained within the Coulomb single boson and single fermion two liquid model,
which we recently developed, and the MIC is a crossover of single fermions into
those of single bosons. We show that this MIC originates from bosons of Coulomb
two liquid model and fermions, whose origin is these bosons. At an increase of
doping up to critical value or temperature up to PG boundary temperature, the
boson system undegoes bosonic insulator - bosonic metal - fermionic metal
transitions.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Spin-Driven Nematic Instability of the Multi-Orbital Hubbard Model: Application to Iron-Based Superconductors
Nematic order resulting from the partial melting of density-waves has been
proposed as the mechanism to explain nematicity in iron-based superconductors.
An outstanding question, however, is whether the microscopic electronic model
for these systems -- the multi-orbital Hubbard model -- displays such an
ordered state as its leading instability. In contrast to usual electronic
instabilities, such as magnetic and charge order, this fluctuation-driven
phenomenon cannot be captured by the standard RPA method. Here, by including
fluctuations beyond RPA in the multi-orbital Hubbard model, we derive its
nematic susceptibility and contrast it with its ferro-orbital order
susceptibility, showing that its leading instability is the spin-driven nematic
phase. Our results also demonstrate the primary role played by the
orbital in driving the nematic transition, and reveal that high-energy magnetic
fluctuations are essential to stabilize nematic order in the absence of
magnetic order.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
The Finite- Impurity Anderson Model in the presence of an external magnetic field
We have investigated effects of an external magnetic field in the impurity
Anderson model with a finite on-site Coulomb repulsion . Large
expansion is employed in the slave boson representation, by taking into account
, , and subspaces. To evaluate the vertex function for the
``empty state boson" self-energy, we have devised two approximations which
reduce much computational efforts without losing general features of the model.
It is found that the Kondo temperature is reduced by the presence of a magnetic
field, and that at low field and at low temperature, the field dependence of
both the Kondo temperature and the impurity magnetization exhibits a scaling
behavior with high accuracy. Further, some interesting features are found in
the field dependence of the impurity magnetization at finite temperature, the
physical implications of which are discussed in terms of the renormalized Kondo
temperature.Comment: 18 pages Revtex, 7 Postscript figures, To appear in Phys.Rev.
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