10,926 research outputs found
Topological insulators and metal-insulator transition in the pyrochlore iridates
The possible existence of topological insulators in cubic pyrochlore iridates
AIrO (A = Y or rare-earth elements) is investigated by taking
into account the strong spin-orbit coupling and trigonal crystal field effect.
It is found that the trigonal crystal field effect, which is always present in
real systems, may destabilize the topological insulator proposed for the ideal
cubic crystal field, leading to a metallic ground state. Thus the trigonal
crystal field is an important control parameter for the metal-insulator
changeover. We propose that this could be one of the reasons why distinct low
temperature ground states may arise for the pyrochlore iridates with different
A-site ions. On the other hand, examining the electron-lattice coupling, we
find that softening of the =0 modes corresponding to trigonal or
tetragonal distortions of the Ir pyrochlore lattice leads to the resurrection
of the strong topological insulator. Thus, in principle, a finite temperature
transition to a low-temperature topological insulator can occur via structural
changes. We also suggest that the application of the external pressure along
[111] or its equivalent directions would be the most efficient way of
generating strong topological insulators in pyrochlore iridates.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, 2 table
Flavor SU(3) analysis of charmless B->PP decays
We perform a global fits to charmless decays which independently
constrain the vertex of the unitarity triangle. The
fitted amplitudes and phase are used to predict the branching ratios and CP
asymmetries of all decay modes, including those of the system. Different
schemes of SU(3) breaking in decay amplitude sizes are analyzed. The
possibility of having a new physics contribution to decays is also
discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figs. Talk given at EPS-HEP07 To appear in the
proceedings, Reference adde
U-Spin Tests of the Standard Model and New Physics
Within the standard model, a relation involving branching ratios and direct
CP asymmetries holds for the B-decay pairs that are related by U-spin. The
violation of this relation indicates new physics (NP). In this paper, we assume
that the NP affects only the Delta S = 1 decays, and show that the NP operators
are generally the same as those appearing in B -> pi K decays. The fit to the
latest B -> pi K data shows that only one NP operator is sizeable. As a
consequence, the relation is expected to be violated for only one decay pair:
Bd -> K0 pi0 and Bs -> Kbar0 pi0.Comment: 12 pages, latex, no figures. References changed to follow MPL
guidelines; info added about U-spin breaking and small NP strong phases;
discussion added about final-state pi-K rescattering; analysis and
conclusions unaltere
A mechanism for unipolar resistance switching in oxide non-volatile memory devices
Building on a recently introduced model for non-volatile resistive switching,
we propose a mechanism for unipolar resistance switching in
metal-insulator-metal sandwich structures. The commutation from the high to low
resistance state and back can be achieved with successive voltage sweeps of the
same polarity. Electronic correlation effects at the metal-insulator interface
are found to play a key role to produce a resistive commutation effect in
qualitative agreement with recent experimental reports on binary transition
metal oxide based sandwich structures.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Spin-triplet pairing instability of the spinon Fermi surface in a U(1) spin liquid
Recent experiments on the organic compound \kappa-(ET)_2Cu_2(CN)_3 have
provided a promising example of a two dimensional spin liquid state. This phase
is described by a two-dimensional spinon Fermi sea coupled to a U(1) gauge
field. We study Kohn-Luttinger-like pairing instabilities of the spinon Fermi
surface due to singular interaction processes with twice-the-Fermi-momentum
transfer. We find that under certain circumstances the pairing instability
occurs in odd-orbital-angular-momentum/spin-triplet channels. Implications to
experiments are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Hysteresis Switching Loops in Ag-manganite memristive interfaces
Multilevel resistance states in silver-manganite interfaces are studied both
experimentally and through a realistic model that includes as a main ingredient
the oxygen vacancies diffusion under applied electric fields. The switching
threshold and amplitude studied through Hysteresis Switching Loops are found to
depend critically on the initial state. The associated vacancy profiles further
unveil the prominent role of the effective electric field acting at the
interfaces. While experimental results validate main assumptions of the model,
the simulations allow to disentangle the microscopic mechanisms behind the
resistive switching in metal-transition metal oxide interfaces.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Jour. of Appl. Phy
Classical antiferromagnet on a hyperkagome lattice
Motivated by recent experiments on Na_4Ir_3O_8 [Y. Okamoto, M. Nohara, H.
Aruga-Katori, and H. Takagi, arXiv:0705.2821 (unpublished)], we study the
classical antiferromagnet on a frustrated three-dimensional lattice obtained by
selectively removing one of four sites in each tetrahedron of the pyrochlore
lattice. This ``hyperkagome'' lattice consists of corner-sharing triangles. We
present the results of large-N mean field theory and Monte Carlo computations
on O(N) classical spin models. It is found that the classical ground states are
highly degenerate. Nonetheless a nematic order emerges at low temperatures in
the Heisenberg model (N=3) via ``order by disorder'', representing the
dominance of coplanar spin configurations. Implications for ongoing experiments
are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, published versio
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