472 research outputs found
Spinon-holon interactions in an anisotropic t-J chain: a comprehensive study
We consider a generalization of the one-dimensional t-J model with
anisotropic spin-spin interactions. We show that the anisotropy leads to an
effective attractive interaction between the spinon and holon excitations,
resulting in a localized bound state. Detailed quantitative analytic
predictions for the dependence of the binding energy on the anisotropy are
presented, and verified by precise numerical simulations. The binding energy is
found to interpolate smoothly between a finite value in the t-Jz limit and zero
in the isotropic limit, going to zero exponentially in the vicinity of the
latter. We identify changes in spinon dispersion as the primary factor for this
non-trivial behavior.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, long story. The short story is
cond-mat/0702213. Published versio
Binding of holons and spinons in the one-dimensional anisotropic t-J model
We study the binding of a holon and a spinon in the one-dimensional
anisotropic t-J model using a Bethe-Salpeter equation approach, exact
diagonalization, and density matrix renormalization group methods on chains of
up to 128 sites. We find that holon-spinon binding changes dramatically as a
function of anisotropy parameter \alpha=J_\perp/J_z: it evolves from an exactly
deducible impurity-like result in the Ising limit to an exponentially shallow
bound state near the isotropic case. A remarkable agreement between the theory
and numerical results suggests that such a change is controlled by the
corresponding evolution of the spinon energy spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Acoustic instability of a circular vortex with a smoothed vorticity profile
It is known that a localized vortex can have two specific mechanisms of
interaction with the ambient flow. The first mechanism is associated with
acoustic radiation, which is accompanied by a loss of energy and causes
instability in the case of negative energy of vortex disturbances. The second
is a Miles mechanism of interaction of the vortex core oscillations with
disturbances in the vicinity of the critical layer (where the phase velocity of
the disturbances coincides with the velocity of the mean flow), accompanied by
an energy flux from the critical layer vicinity, which leads to damping in the
case of negative energy of the oscillations. For the first time, the flow with
both of these mechanisms is considered. The problem is solved from the first
principles. It is shown that the Miles mechanism can completely suppress
acoustic instability, however, in the case of a stronger loss of energy due to
acoustic radiation, acoustic instability will dominate. The role of various
parameters is analyzed and a quantitative criterion for the acoustic
instability of a vortex with a smoothed vorticity profile is obtained
Spin pseudogap in Ni-doped SrCuO2
The S=1/2 spin chain material SrCuO2 doped with 1% S=1 Ni-impurities is
studied by inelastic neutron scattering. At low temperatures, the spectrum
shows a pseudogap \Delta ~ 8 meV, absent in the parent compound, and not
related to any structural phase transition. The pseudogap is shown to be a
generic feature of quantum spin chains with dilute defects. A simple model
based on this idea quantitatively accounts for the exprimental data measured in
the temperature range 2-300 K, and allows to represent the momentum-integrated
dynamic structure factor in a universal scaling form.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Quantum vs. Geometric Disorder in a Two-Dimensional Heisenberg Antiferromagnet
We present a numerical study of the spin-1/2 bilayer Heisenberg
antiferromagnet with random interlayer dimer dilution. From the temperature
dependence of the uniform susceptibility and a scaling analysis of the spin
correlation length we deduce the ground state phase diagram as a function of
nonmagnetic impurity concentration p and bilayer coupling g. At the site
percolation threshold, there exists a multicritical point at small but nonzero
bilayer coupling g_m = 0.15(3). The magnetic properties of the single-layer
material La_2Cu_{1-p}(Zn,Mg)_pO_4 near the percolation threshold appear to be
controlled by the proximity to this new quantum critical point.Comment: minor changes, updated figure
8He Spectroscopy in Stopped Pion Absorption By 9Be
Level structure of 8He has been studied in the reaction of stopped pion absorption by 9Be nuclei. The missing mass spectrum in the range 0 MeV ≤ MM ≤ 10 MeV has been described by the superposition of phase-space distributions and the three states of 8He. Parameters of these states have been compared with data of other experimental and theoretical works
Instability of antiferromagnetic magnons in strong fields
We predict that spin-waves in an ordered quantum antiferromagnet (AFM) in a
strong magnetic field become unstable with respect to spontaneous two-magnon
decays. At zero temperature, the instability occurs between the threshold field
and the saturation field . As an example, we investigate the
high-field dynamics of a Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a square lattice and
show that the single-magnon branch of the spectrum disappears in the most part
of the Brillouin zone.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted to PR
Holes in the t-J_z model: a thorough study
The t-J_z model is the strongly anisotropic limit of the t-J model which
captures some general properties of the doped antiferromagnets (AF). The
absence of spin fluctuations simplifies the analytical treatment of hole motion
in an AF background and allows us to calculate the single- and two-hole spectra
with high accuracy using regular diagram technique combined with real-space
approach. At the same time, numerical studies of this model via exact
diagonalization (ED) on small clusters show negligible finite size effects for
a number of quantities, thus allowing a direct comparison between analytical
and numerical results. Both approaches demonstrate that the holes have tendency
to pair in the p- and d-wave channels at realistic values of t/J. The
interactions leading to pairing and effects selecting p and d waves are
thoroughly investigated. The role of transverse spin fluctuations is considered
using perturbation theory. Based on the results of the present study, we
discuss the pairing problem in the realistic t-J-like model. Possible
implications for preformed pairs formation and phase separation are drawn.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Low energy states with different symmetries in the t-J model with two holes on a 32-site lattice
We study the low energy states of the t-J model with two holes on a 32-site
lattice with periodic boundary conditions. In contrary to common belief, we
find that the state with d_{x^2-y^2} symmetry is not always the ground state in
the realistic parameter range 0.2\le J/t\le 0.4. There exist low-lying
finite-momentum p-states whose energies are lower than the d_{x^2-y^2} state
when J/t is small enough. We compare various properties of these low energy
states at J/t=0.3 where they are almost degenerate, and find that those
properties associated with the holes (such as the hole-hole correlation and the
electron momentum distribution function) are very different between the
d_{x^2-y^2} and p states, while their spin properties are very similar.
Finally, we demonstrate that by adding ``realistic'' terms to the t-J model
Hamiltonian, we can easily destroy the d_{x^2-y^2} ground state. This casts
doubt on the robustness of the d_{x^2-y^2} state as the ground state in a
microscopic model for the high temperature superconductors
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