845 research outputs found
Interplay between spin-density-wave and superconducting states in quasi-one-dimensional conductors
The interference between spin-density-wave and superconducting instabilities
in quasi-one-dimensional correlated metals is analyzed using the
renormalization group method. At the one-loop level, we show how the
interference leads to a continuous crossover from a spin-density-wave state to
unconventional superconductivity when deviations from perfect nesting of the
Fermi surface exceed a critical value. Singlet pairing between electrons on
neighboring stacks is found to be the most favorable symmetry for
superconductivity. The consequences of non uniform spin-density-wave pairing on
the structure of phase diagram within the crossover region is also discussed.Comment: 10 pages RevTex,4 Figures, submitted to EPJ
The hydrogen isotopic composition of fossil micrometeorites: Implications for the origin of water on Earth.
Accepted versio
Variational description of the dimensional cross-over in the array of coupled one-dimensional conductors
Variational wave function is proposed to describe electronic properties of an
array of one-dimensional conductors coupled by transverse hopping and
interaction. For weak or intermediate in-chain interaction the wave function
has the following structure: Tomonaga-Luttinger bosons with momentum higher
then some variational quantity \tilde\Lambda are in their ground state while
other bosons (with |k|<\tilde\Lambda) form kinks -- fermion-like excitations of
the Tomonaga-Luttinger boson field. Nature of the ground state for this
quasiparticles can be determined by solving three dimensional effective
hamiltonian. Since the anisotropy of the effective hamiltonian is small the use
of the mean field theory is justified. For repulsive interaction possible
phases are density wave and p-wave superconductivity. Our method allows us to
calculate the low-energy part of different electronic Green's functions. In
order to do that it is enough to apply standard perturbation theory technique
to the effective hamiltonian. When the in-chain interaction is strong
\tilde\Lambda vanishes and no fermionic excitation is present in the system. In
this regime the dynamics is described by transversally coupled
Tomonaga-Luttinger bosons
Triplet superconducting pairing and density-wave instabilities in organic conductors
Using a renormalization group approach, we determine the phase diagram of an
extended quasi-one-dimensional electron gas model that includes interchain
hopping, nesting deviations and both intrachain and interchain repulsive
interactions. We find a close proximity of spin-density- and
charge-density-wave phases, singlet d-wave and triplet f-wave superconducting
phases. There is a striking correspondence between our results and recent
puzzling experimental findings in the Bechgaard salts, including the
coexistence of spin-density-wave and charge-density-wave phases and the
possibility of a triplet pairing in the superconducting phase.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps figure
Liquid Film Coating a Fiber as a Model System for the Formation of Bound States in Active Dispersive-Dissipative Nonlinear Media
We analyze the coherent-structure interaction and the formation of bound states in active dispersivedissipative
nonlinear media using a viscous film coating a vertical fiber as a prototype. The coherent
structures in this case are droplike pulses that dominate the evolution of the film.We study experimentally
the interaction dynamics and show evidence for formation of bound states. A theoretical explanation is
provided through a coherent-structures theory of a simple model for the flow
Mechanical tuning of the evaporation rate of liquid on crossed fibers
We investigate experimentally the drying of a small volume of perfectly
wetting liquid on two crossed fibers. We characterize the drying dynamics for
the three liquid morphologies that are encountered in this geometry: drop,
column and a mixed morphology, in which a drop and a column coexist. For each
morphology, we rationalize our findings with theoretical models that capture
the drying kinetics. We find that the evaporation rate depends significantly on
the liquid morphology and that the drying of liquid column is faster than the
evaporation of the drop and the mixed morphology for a given liquid volume.
Finally, we illustrate that shearing a network of fibers reduces the angle
between them, changes the morphology towards the column state, and so enhances
the drying rate of a volatile liquid deposited on it
Nuclear break-up of 11Be
The break-up of 11Be was studied at 41AMeV using a secondary beam of 11Be
from the GANIL facility on a 48Ti target by measuring correlations between the
10Be core, the emitted neutrons and gamma rays. The nuclear break-up leading to
the emission of a neutron at large angle in the laboratory frame is identified
with the towing mode through its characteristic n-fragment correlation. The
experimental spectra are compared with a model where the time dependent
Schrodinger equation (TDSE) is solved for the neutron initially in the 11 Be. A
good agreement is found between experiment and theory for the shapes of neutron
experimental energies and angular distributions. The spectroscopic factor of
the 2s orbital is tentatively extracted to be 0.46+-0.15. The neutron emission
from the 1p and 1d orbitals is also studied
Superconducting pairing and density-wave instabilities in quasi-one-dimensional conductors
Using a renormalization group approach, we determine the phase diagram of an
extended quasi-one-dimensional electron gas model that includes interchain
hopping, nesting deviations and both intrachain and interchain repulsive
interactions. d-wave superconductivity, which dominates over the
spin-density-wave (SDW) phase at large nesting deviations, becomes unstable to
the benefit of a triplet -wave phase for a weak repulsive interchain
backscattering term , despite the persistence of dominant SDW
correlations in the normal state. Antiferromagnetism becomes unstable against
the formation of a charge-density-wave state when exceeds some
critical value. While these features persist when both Umklapp processes and
interchain forward scattering () are taken into account, the effect
of alone is found to frustrate nearest-neighbor interchain - and
-wave pairing and instead favor next-nearest-neighbor interchain singlet or
triplet pairing. We argue that the close proximity of SDW and
charge-density-wave phases, singlet d-wave and triplet -wave superconducting
phases in the theoretical phase diagram provides a possible explanation for
recent puzzling experimental findings in the Bechgaard salts, including the
coexistence of SDW and charge-density-wave phases and the possibility of a
triplet pairing in the superconducting phase.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figure
Superconductivity and Density Wave in the Quasi-One-Dimensional Systems: Renormalization Group Study
The anisotropic superconductivity and the density wave have been investigated
by applying the Kadanoff-Wilson renormalization group technique to the
quasi-one-dimensional system with finite-range interactions. It is found that a
temperature (T) dependence of response functions is proportional to exp(1/T) in
a wide region of temperature even within the one-loop approximation. Transition
temperatures are calculated to obtain the phase diagram of the
quasi-one-dimensional system, which is compared with that of the
pure-one-dimensional system. Next-nearest neighbor interactions (V_2) induce
large charge fluctuations, which suppress the d_{x^2 -y^2}-wave singlet
superconducting (dSS) state and enhance the f-wave triplet superconducting
(fTS) state. From this effect, the transition temperature of fTS becomes
comparable to that of dSS for large V_2, so that field-induced f-wave triplet
pairing could be possible. These features are discussed to comprehend the
experiments on the (TMTSF)_2PF_6 salt.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
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