2,326 research outputs found
Ground-State Decay Rate for the Zener Breakdown in Band and Mott Insulators
Non-linear transport of electrons in strong electric fields, as typified by
dielectric breakdown, is re-formulated in terms of the ground-state decay rate
originally studied by Schwinger in non-linear QED. We discuss the effect of
electron interaction on Zener tunneling by comparing the dielectric breakdown
of the band insulator and the Mott insulator, where the latter is studied by
the time-dependent density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). The relation
with the Berry's phase theory of polarization is also established.Comment: 5 pages 2 figures, revised text, version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Electronic states in a magnetic quantum-dot molecule: phase transitions and spontaneous symmetry breaking
We show that a double quantum-dot system made of diluted magnetic
semiconductor behaves unlike usual molecules. In a semiconductor double quantum
dot or in a diatomic molecule, the ground state of a single carrier is
described by a symmetric orbital. In a magnetic material molecule, new ground
states with broken symmetry can appear due the competition between the
tunnelling and magnetic polaron energy. With decreasing temperature, the ground
state changes from the normal symmetric state to a state with spontaneously
broken symmetry. Interestingly, the symmetry of a magnetic molecule is
recovered at very low temperatures. A magnetic double quantum dot with
broken-symmetry phases can be used a voltage-controlled nanoscale memory cell.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Different origin of the ferromagnetic order in (Ga,Mn)As and (Ga,Mn)N
The mechanism for the ferromagnetic order of (Ga,Mn)As and (Ga,Mn)N is
extensively studied over a vast range of Mn concentrations. We calculate the
electronic structures of these materials using density functional theory in
both the local spin density approximation and the LDA+U scheme, that we have
now implemented in the code SIESTA.
For (Ga,Mn)As, the LDA+U approach leads to a hole mediated picture of the
ferromagnetism, with an exchange constant =~ -2.8 eV. This is smaller
than that obtained with LSDA, which overestimates the exchange coupling between
Mn ions and the As holes.
In contrast, the ferromagnetism in wurtzite (Ga,Mn)N is caused by the
double-exchange mechanism, since a hole of strong character is found at the
Fermi level in both the LSDA and the LDA+U approaches. In this case the
coupling between the Mn ions decays rapidly with the Mn-Mn separation. This
suggests a two phases picture of the ferromagnetic order in (Ga,Mn)N, with a
robust ferromagnetic phase at large Mn concentration coexisting with a diluted
weak ferromagnetic phase.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Thermoelastic Damping in Micro- and Nano-Mechanical Systems
The importance of thermoelastic damping as a fundamental dissipation
mechanism for small-scale mechanical resonators is evaluated in light of recent
efforts to design high-Q micrometer- and nanometer-scale electro-mechanical
systems (MEMS and NEMS). The equations of linear thermoelasticity are used to
give a simple derivation for thermoelastic damping of small flexural vibrations
in thin beams. It is shown that Zener's well-known approximation by a
Lorentzian with a single thermal relaxation time slightly deviates from the
exact expression.Comment: 10 pages. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Electronic Phase Separation in Manganite/Insulator Interfaces
By using a realist microscopic model, we study the electric and magnetic
properties of the interface between a half metallic manganite and an insulator.
We find that the lack of carriers at the interface debilitates the double
exchange mechanism, weakening the ferromagnetic coupling between the Mn ions.
In this situation the ferromagnetic order of the Mn spins near the interface is
unstable against antiferromagnetic CE correlations, and a separation between
ferromagnetic/metallic and antiferromagnetic/insulator phases at the interfaces
can occur. We obtain that the insertion of extra layers of undoped manganite at
the interface introduces extra carriers which reinforce the double exchange
mechanism and suppress antiferromagnetic instabilities.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures include
On the conversion efficiency of ultracold fermionic atoms to bosonic molecules via Feshbach resonances
We explain why the experimental efficiency observed in the conversion of
ultracold Fermi gases of K and Li atoms into diatomic Bose gases
is limited to 0.5 when the Feshbach resonance sweep rate is sufficiently slow
to pass adiabatically through the Landau Zener transition but faster than ``the
collision rate'' in the gas, and increases beyond 0.5 when it is slower. The
0.5 efficiency limit is due to the preparation of a statistical mixture of two
spin-states, required to enable s-wave scattering. By constructing the
many-body state of the system we show that this preparation yields a mixture of
even and odd parity pair-states, where only even parity can produce molecules.
The odd parity spin-symmetric states must decorrelate before the constituent
atoms can further Feshbach scatter thereby increasing the conversion
efficiency; ``the collision rate'' is the pair decorrelation rate.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, final version accepted to Phys. Rev. Let
Phase Diagram and Incommensurate Phases in Undoped Manganites
We study the existence of incommensurate phases in the phase diagram of the
two orbital double exchange model coupled with Jahn-Teller phonons and with
superexchange interactions. In agreement with experimental results, we find
that undoped manganites ( being some rare earth element) show
temperature induced commensurate-incommensurate phase transitions. In the
incommensurate phase the magnetic wave vector varies with temperature. The
incommensurate phase arises from the competition between the short range
antiferromagnetic superexchange interaction and the long range ferromagnetic
double exchange interaction
A new Bloch period for interacting cold atoms in 1D optical lattices
The paper studies Bloch oscillations of ultracold atoms in optical lattice in
the presence of atom-atom interaction. A new, interaction-induced Bloch period
is identified. The analytical results are corroborated by realistic numerical
calculations.Comment: revtex4, 4 pages, 4 figures, gzipped tar fil
Phase effects in neutrino conversions during a supernova shock wave
Neutrinos escaping from a core collapse supernova a few seconds after bounce
pass through the shock wave, where they may encounter one or more resonances
corresponding to . The neutrino mass eigenstates in
matter may stay coherent between these multiple resonances, giving rise to
oscillations in the survival probabilities of neutrino species. We provide an
analytical approximation to these inevitable phase effects, that relates the
density profile of the shock wave to the oscillation pattern. The phase effects
are present only if the multiple resonances encountered by neutrinos are
semi-adiabatic, which typically happens for 10^{-5} \lsim \sin^2 \theta_{13}
\lsim 10^{-3}. The observability of these oscillations is severely limited by
the inability of the detectors to reconstruct the neutrino energy faithfully.
For typical shock wave profiles, the detection of these phase effects seems
rather unlikely. However, if the effects are indeed identified in the \nuebar
spectra, they would establish inverted hierarchy and a nonzero value of
.Comment: 10 pages, 9 eps figures. Major changes made. Final version to be
published in PR
Effect of magnetic state on the transition in iron: First-principle calculations of the Bain transformation path
Energetics of the fcc () - bcc () lattice transformation by
the Bain tetragonal deformation is calculated for both magnetically ordered and
paramagnetic (disordered local moment) states of iron. The first-principle
computational results manifest a relevance of the magnetic order in a scenario
of the - transition and reveal a special role of the Curie
temperature of -Fe, , where a character of the transformation is
changed. At a cooling down to the temperatures one can expect that
the transformation is developed as a lattice instability whereas for
it follows a standard mechanism of creation and growth of an embryo of the new
phase. It explains a closeness of to the temperature of start of the
martensitic transformation, .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted in Phys. Rev. Letter
- …