3,938 research outputs found
Multi-condensate states in BCS superconductors
A BCS (Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer) superconductor, which is placed out of
equilibrium, can develop quantum instabilities, which manifest themselves in
oscillations of the superconductor's order parameter (pairing amplitude
). These instabilities are a manifestations of the Cooper instability.
Inelastic collisions are essential in resolving those instabilities.
Incorporating the quantum instabilities and collisions in a unified approach
based on Richardson's exact solution of the pairing Hamiltonian, we find that a
BCS superconductor may end up in a state in which the spectrum has more than
one gap.Comment: Text expanded, figures added, Journal Ref and DOI adde
Fermi Edge Resonances in Non-equilibrium States of Fermi Gases
We formulate the problem of the Fermi Edge Singularity in non-equilibrium
states of a Fermi gas as a matrix Riemann-Hilbert problem with an integrable
kernel. This formulation is the most suitable for studying the singular
behavior at each edge of non-equilibrium Fermi states by means of the method of
steepest descent, and also reveals the integrable structure of the problem. We
supplement this result by extending the familiar approach to the problem of the
Fermi Edge Singularity via the bosonic representation of the electronic
operators to non-equilibrium settings. It provides a compact way to extract the
leading asymptotes.Comment: Accepted for publication, J. Phys.
Orthogonality catastrophe and shock waves in a non-equilibrium Fermi gas
A semiclassical wave-packet propagating in a dissipationless Fermi gas
inevitably enters a "gradient catastrophe" regime, where an initially smooth
front develops large gradients and undergoes a dramatic shock wave phenomenon.
The non-linear effects in electronic transport are due to the curvature of the
electronic spectrum at the Fermi surface. They can be probed by a sudden
switching of a local potential. In equilibrium, this process produces a large
number of particle-hole pairs, a phenomenon closely related to the
Orthogonality Catastrophe. We study a generalization of this phenomenon to the
non-equilibrium regime and show how the Orthogonality Catastrophe cures the
Gradient Catastrophe, providing a dispersive regularization mechanism. We show
that a wave packet overturns and collapses into modulated oscillations with the
wave vector determined by the height of the initial wave. The oscillations
occupy a growing region extending forward with velocity proportional to the
initial height of the packet. We derive a fundamental equation for the
transition rates (MKP-equation) and solve it by means of the Whitham modulation
theory.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, revtex4, pr
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