75,200 research outputs found

    Spin resonance in the d-wave superconductor CeCoIn5

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    Neutron scattering is used to probe antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations in the d-wave heavy fermion superconductor CeCoIn5_{5} (Tc_{c}=2.3 K). Superconductivity develops from a state with slow (Γ\hbar\Gamma=0.3 ±\pm 0.15 meV) commensurate (Q0{\bf{Q_0}}=(1/2,1/2,1/2)) antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations and nearly isotropic spin correlations. The characteristic wavevector in CeCoIn5_{5} is the same as CeIn3_{3} but differs from the incommensurate wavevector measured in antiferromagnetically ordered CeRhIn5_{5}. A sharp spin resonance (Γ<0.07\hbar\Gamma<0.07 meV) at ω\hbar \omega = 0.60 ±\pm 0.03 meV develops in the superconducting state removing spectral weight from low-energy transfers. The presence of a resonance peak is indicative of strong coupling between f-electron magnetism and superconductivity and consistent with a d-wave gap order parameter satisfying Δ(q+Q0)=Δ(q)\Delta({\bf q+Q_0})=-\Delta({\bf q}).Comment: (5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Lett.

    {VoG}: {Summarizing} and Understanding Large Graphs

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    How can we succinctly describe a million-node graph with a few simple sentences? How can we measure the "importance" of a set of discovered subgraphs in a large graph? These are exactly the problems we focus on. Our main ideas are to construct a "vocabulary" of subgraph-types that often occur in real graphs (e.g., stars, cliques, chains), and from a set of subgraphs, find the most succinct description of a graph in terms of this vocabulary. We measure success in a well-founded way by means of the Minimum Description Length (MDL) principle: a subgraph is included in the summary if it decreases the total description length of the graph. Our contributions are three-fold: (a) formulation: we provide a principled encoding scheme to choose vocabulary subgraphs; (b) algorithm: we develop \method, an efficient method to minimize the description cost, and (c) applicability: we report experimental results on multi-million-edge real graphs, including Flickr and the Notre Dame web graph

    Test of the Universality of Naive-time-reversal-odd Fragmentation Functions

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    We investigate the ''spontaneous'' hyperon transverse polarization in e+ee^+e^- annihilation and semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering processes as a test of the universality of the naive-time-reversal-odd transverse momentum dependent fragmentation functions. We find that universality implies definite sign relations among various observables. This provides a unique opportunity to study initial/final state interaction effects in the fragmentation process and test the associated factorization.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Exact Relations for a Strongly-interacting Fermi Gas near a Feshbach Resonance

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    A set of universal relations between various properties of any few-body or many-body system consisting of fermions with two spin states and a large but finite scattering length have been derived by Shina Tan. We derive generalizations of the Tan relations for a two-channel model for fermions near a Feshbach resonance that includes a molecular state whose detuning energy controls the scattering length. We use quantum field theory methods, including renormalization and the operator product expansion, to derive these relations. They reduce to the Tan relations as the scattering length is made increasingly large.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figure

    Magnetic field splitting of the spin-resonance in CeCoIn5

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    Neutron scattering in strong magnetic fields is used to show the spin-resonance in superconducting CeCoIn5 (Tc=2.3 K) is a doublet. The underdamped resonance (\hbar \Gamma=0.069 \pm 0.019 meV) Zeeman splits into two modes at E_{\pm}=\hbar \Omega_{0}\pm g\mu_{B} \mu_{0}H with g=0.96 \pm 0.05. A linear extrapolation of the lower peak reaches zero energy at 11.2 \pm 0.5 T, near the critical field for the incommensurate "Q-phase" indicating that the Q-phase is a bose condensate of spin excitons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Quark fragmentation in the θ\theta-vacuum

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    The vacuum of Quantum Chromodynamics is a superposition of degenerate states with different topological numbers that are connected by tunneling (the θ\theta-vacuum). The tunneling events are due to topologically non-trivial configurations of gauge fields (e.g. the instantons) that induce local \p-odd domains in Minkowski space-time. We study the quark fragmentation in this topologically non-trivial QCD background. We find that even though QCD globally conserves \p and \cp symmetries, two new kinds of \p-odd fragmentation functions emerge. They generate interesting dihadron correlations: one is the azimuthal angle correlation cos(ϕ1+ϕ2)\sim \cos(\phi_1 + \phi_2) usually referred to as the Collins effect, and the other is the \p-odd correlation sin(ϕ1+ϕ2)\sim \sin(\phi_1 + \phi_2) that vanishes in the cross section summed over many events, but survives on the event-by-event basis. Using the chiral quark model we estimate the magnitude of these new fragmentation functions. We study their experimental manifestations in dihadron production in e+ee^+e^- collisions, and comment on the applicability of our approach in deep-inelastic scattering, proton-proton and heavy ion collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Metal-insulator (fermion-boson)-crossover origin of pseudogap phase of cuprates I: anomalous heat conductivity, insulator resistivity boundary, nonlinear entropy

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    Among all experimental observations of cuprate physics, the metal-insulator-crossover (MIC), seen in the pseudogap (PG) region of the temperature-doping phase diagram of copper-oxides under a strong magnetic field, when the superconductivity is suppressed, is most likely the most intriguing one. Since it was expected that the PG-normal state for these materials, as for conventional superconductors, is conducting. This MIC, revealed in such phenomena as heat conductivity downturn, anomalous Lorentz ratio, insulator resistivity boundary, nonlinear entropy, resistivity temperature upturn, insulating ground state, nematicity- and stripe-phases and Fermi pockets, unambiguously indicates on the insulating normal state, from which the high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) appears. In the present work (article I), we discuss the MIC phenomena mentioned in the title of article. The second work (article II) will be devoted to discussion of other listed above MIC phenomena and also to interpretation of the recent observations in the hidden magnetic order and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments spin and charge fluctuations as the intra PG and HTS pair ones. We find that all these MIC (called in the literature as non-Fermi liquid) phenomena can be obtained within the Coulomb single boson and single fermion two liquid model, which we recently developed, and the MIC is a crossover of single fermions into those of single bosons. We show that this MIC originates from bosons of Coulomb two liquid model and fermions, whose origin is these bosons. At an increase of doping up to critical value or temperature up to PG boundary temperature, the boson system undegoes bosonic insulator - bosonic metal - fermionic metal transitions.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure

    Scattering Rule in Soliton Cellular Automaton associated with Crystal Base of Uq(D4(3))U_q(D_4^{(3)})

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    In terms of the crystal base of a quantum affine algebra Uq(g)U_q(\mathfrak{g}), we study a soliton cellular automaton (SCA) associated with the exceptional affine Lie algebra g=D4(3)\mathfrak{g}=D_4^{(3)}. The solitons therein are labeled by the crystals of quantum affine algebra Uq(A1(1))U_q(A_1^{(1)}). The scatteing rule is identified with the combinatorial RR matrix for Uq(A1(1))U_q(A_1^{(1)})-crystals. Remarkably, the phase shifts in our SCA are given by {\em 3-times} of those in the well-known box-ball system.Comment: 25 page

    Transverse momentum broadening of vector boson production in high energy nuclear collisions

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    We calculate in perturbative QCD the transverse momentum broadening of vector boson production in high energy nuclear collisions. We evaluate the effect of initial-state parton multiple scattering for the production of the Drell-Yan virtual photon and W/ZW/Z bosons. We calculate both the initial- and final-state multiple scattering effect for the production of heavy quarkonia and their transverse momentum broadening in both NRQCD and Color Evaporation model of quarkonium formation. We find that J/ψ\psi and Υ\Upsilon broadening in hadron-nucleus collision is close to 2CA/CF2C_A/C_F times the corresponding Drell-Yan broadening, which gives a good description of existing Fermilab data. Our calculations are also consistent with RHIC data on J/ψ\psi broadening in relativistic heavy ion collisions. We predict the transverse momentum broadening of vector boson (J/ψ\psi, Υ\Upsilon, and W/ZW/Z) production in relativistic heavy ion collisions at the LHC, and discuss the role of the vector boson broadening in diagnosing medium properties.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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