7,265 research outputs found
Construction of Wannier functions from localized atomic-like orbitals
The problem of construction of the Wannier functions (WFs) in a restricted
Hilbert space of eigenstates of the one-electron Hamiltonian (forming
the so-called low-energy part of the spectrum) can be formulated in several
different ways. One possibility is to use the projector-operator techniques,
which pick up a set of trial atomic orbitals and project them onto the given
Hilbert space. Another possibility is to employ the downfolding method, which
eliminates the high-energy part of the spectrum and incorporates all related to
it properties into the energy-dependence of an effective Hamiltonian. We show
that by modifying the high-energy part of the spectrum of the original
Hamiltonian , which is rather irrelevant to the construction of WFs in
the low-energy part of the spectrum, these two methods can be formulated in an
absolutely exact and identical form, so that the main difference between them
is reduced to the choice of the trial orbitals. Concerning the latter part of
the problem, we argue that an optimal choice for trial orbitals can be based on
the maximization of the site-diagonal part of the density matrix. The main idea
is illustrated for a simple toy model, consisting of only two bands, as well as
for a more realistic example of bands in VO. An analogy with
the search of the ground state of a many-electron system is also discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
First-principle Wannier functions and effective lattice fermion models for narrow-band compounds
We propose a systematic procedure for constructing effective lattice fermion
models for narrow-band compounds on the basis of first-principles electronic
structure calculations. The method is illustrated for the series of
transition-metal (TM) oxides: SrVO, YTiO, VO, and
YMoO. It consists of three parts, starting from LDA. (i)
construction of the kinetic energy Hamiltonian using downfolding method. (ii)
solution of an inverse problem and construction of the Wannier functions (WFs)
for the given kinetic energy Hamiltonian. (iii) calculation of screened Coulomb
interactions in the basis of \textit{auxiliary} WFs, for which the
kinetic-energy term is set to be zero. The last step is necessary in order to
avoid the double counting of the kinetic-energy term, which is included
explicitly into the model. The screened Coulomb interactions are calculated in
a hybrid scheme. First, we evaluate the screening caused by the change of
occupation numbers and the relaxation of the LMTO basis functions, using the
conventional constraint-LDA approach, where all matrix elements of
hybridization involving the TM orbitals are set to be zero. Then, we switch
on the hybridization and evaluate the screening associated with the change of
this hybridization in RPA. The second channel of screening is very important,
and results in a relatively small value of the effective Coulomb interaction
for isolated bands. We discuss details of this screening and consider
its band-filling dependence, frequency dependence, influence of the lattice
distortion, proximity of other bands, and the dimensionality of the model
Hamiltonian.Comment: 35 pages, 25 figure
Fingerprints of Spin-Orbital Physics in Crystalline O
The alkali hyperoxide KO is a molecular analog of strongly-correlated
systems, comprising of orbitally degenerate magnetic O ions. Using
first-principles electronic structure calculations, we set up an effective
spin-orbital model for the low-energy \textit{molecular} orbitals and argue
that many anomalous properties of KO replicate the status of its orbital
system in various temperature regimes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Lattice Distortion and Magnetism of 3d- Perovskite Oxides
Several puzzling aspects of interplay of the experimental lattice distortion
and the the magnetic properties of four narrow -band perovskite oxides
(YTiO, LaTiO, YVO, and LaVO) are clarified using results of
first-principles electronic structure calculations. First, we derive parameters
of the effective Hubbard-type Hamiltonian for the isolated bands using
newly developed downfolding method for the kinetic-energy part and a hybrid
approach, based on the combination of the random-phase approximation and the
constraint local-density approximation, for the screened Coulomb interaction
part. Then, we solve the obtained Hamiltonian using a number of techniques,
including the mean-field Hartree-Fock (HF) approximation, the second-order
perturbation theory for the correlation energy, and a variational superexchange
theory. Even though the crystal-field splitting is not particularly large to
quench the orbital degrees of freedom, the crystal distortion imposes a severe
constraint on the form of the possible orbital states, which favor the
formation of the experimentally observed magnetic structures in YTiO,
YVO_, and LaVO even at the HF level. Beyond the HF approximation, the
correlations effects systematically improve the agreement with the experimental
data. Using the same type of approximations we could not reproduce the correct
magnetic ground state of LaTiO. However, we expect that the situation may
change by systematically improving the level of approximations for dealing with
the correlation effects.Comment: 30 pages, 17 figures, 8 tables, high-quality figures are available
via e-mai
Non-Ground-State Bose-Einstein Condensates of Trapped Atoms
The possibility of creating a Bose condensate of trapped atoms in a
non-ground state is suggested. Such a nonequilibrium Bose condensate can be
formed if one, first, obtains the conventional Bose condensate in the ground
state and then transfers the condensed atoms to a non-ground state by means of
a resonance pumping. The properties of ground and non-ground states are
compared and plausible applications of such nonequilibrium condensates are
discussed.Comment: 1 file, 16 pages, RevTe
Late-Time Circumstellar Interaction in a Spitzer Selected Sample of Type IIn Supernovae
Type IIn supernovae (SNe IIn) are a rare (< 10%) subclass of core-collapse
SNe that exhibit relatively narrow emission lines from a dense, pre-existing
circumstellar medium (CSM). In 2009, a warm Spitzer survey observed 30 SNe IIn
discovered in 2003 - 2008 and detected 10 SNe at distances out to 175 Mpc with
unreported late-time infrared emission, in some cases more than 5 years
post-discovery. For this single epoch of data, the warm-dust parameters suggest
the presence of a radiative heating source consisting of optical/X-ray emission
continuously generated by ongoing CSM interaction. Here we present
multi-wavelength follow-up observations of this sample of 10 SNe IIn and the
well-studied Type IIn SN 2010jl. A recent epoch of Spitzer observations reveals
ongoing mid-infrared emission from nine of the SNe in this sample. We also
detect three of the SNe in archival WISE data, in addition to SNe 1987A,
2004dj, and 2008iy. For at least five of the SNe in the sample, optical and/or
X-ray emission confirms the presence of radiative emission from ongoing CSM
interaction. The two Spitzer nondetections are consistent with the forward
shock overrunning and destroying the dust shell, a result that places upper
limits on the dust-shell size. The optical and infrared observations confirm
the radiative heating model and constrain a number of model parameters,
including progenitor mass-loss characteristics. All of the SNe in this sample
experienced an outburst on the order of tens to hundreds of years prior to the
SN explosion followed by periods of less intense mass loss. Although all
evidence points to massive progenitors, the variation in the data highlights
the diversity in SN IIn progenitor evolution. While these observations do not
identify a particular progenitor system, they demonstrate that future,
coordinated, multi-wavelength campaigns can constrain theoretical mass-loss
models.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted to AJ (with comments
Constraining the Progenitor Companion of the Nearby Type Ia SN 2011fe with a Nebular Spectrum at +981 Days
We present an optical nebular spectrum of the nearby Type Ia supernova
2011fe, obtained 981 days after explosion. SN 2011fe exhibits little evolution
since the +593 day optical spectrum, but there are several curious aspects in
this new extremely late-time regime. We suggest that the persistence of the
~\AA\ feature is due to Na I D, and that a new emission feature at
~\AA\ may be [Ca II]. Also, we discuss whether the new emission
feature at ~\AA\ might be [Fe I] or the high-velocity hydrogen
predicted by Mazzali et al. The nebular feature at 5200~\AA\ exhibits a linear
velocity evolution of per 100 days from at least
+220 to +980 days, but the line's shape also changes in this time, suggesting
that line blending contributes to the evolution. At days after
explosion, flux from the SN has declined to a point where contribution from a
luminous secondary could be detected. In this work we make the first
observational tests for a post-impact remnant star and constrain its
temperature and luminosity to and
. Additionally, we do not see any evidence for narrow H
emission in our spectrum. We conclude that observations continue to strongly
exclude many single-degenerate scenarios for SN 2011fe.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, published by MNRA
Variability of Fe II Emission Features in the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 5548
We study the low-contrast Fe II emission blends in the ultraviolet
(1250--2200A) and optical (4000--6000A) spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC
5548 and show that these features vary in flux and that these variations are
correlated with those of the optical continuum. The amplitude of variability of
the optical Fe II emission is 50% - 75% that of Hbeta and the ultraviolet Fe II
emission varies with an even larger amplitude than Hbeta. However, accurate
measurement of the flux in these blends proves to be very difficult even using
excellent Fe II templates to fit the spectra. We are able to constrain only
weakly the optical Fe II emission-line response timescale to a value less than
several weeks; this upper limit exceeds all the reliably measured emission-line
lags in this source so it is not particularly meaningful. Nevertheless, the
fact that the optical Fe II and continuum flux variations are correlated
indicates that line fluorescence in a photoionized plasma, rather than
collisional excitation, is responsible for the Fe II emission. The iron
emission templates are available upon request.Comment: 34 pages including 12 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication
by ApJ (tentatively in vol. 626 June 10, 2005
Crossover from hydrodynamic to acoustic drag on quartz tuning forks in normal and superfluid 4He
We present measurements of the drag forces on quartz tuning forks oscillating at low velocities in normal and superfluid 4He. We have investigated the dissipative drag over a wide range of frequencies, from 6.5 to 600 kHz, by using arrays of forks with varying prong lengths and by exciting the forks in their fundamental and first overtone modes. At low frequencies the behavior is dominated by laminar hydrodynamic drag, governed by the fluid viscosity. At higher frequencies acoustic drag is dominant and is described well by a three-dimensional model of sound emission
Observation of vortex dipoles in an oblate Bose-Einstein condensate
We report experimental observations and numerical simulations of the
formation, dynamics, and lifetimes of single and multiply charged quantized
vortex dipoles in highly oblate dilute-gas Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs). We
nucleate pairs of vortices of opposite charge (vortex dipoles) by forcing
superfluid flow around a repulsive gaussian obstacle within the BEC. By
controlling the flow velocity we determine the critical velocity for the
nucleation of a single vortex dipole, with excellent agreement between
experimental and numerical results. We present measurements of vortex dipole
dynamics, finding that the vortex cores of opposite charge can exist for many
seconds and that annihilation is inhibited in our highly oblate trap geometry.
For sufficiently rapid flow velocities we find that clusters of like-charge
vortices aggregate into long-lived dipolar flow structures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 EPAPS fil
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