3,959 research outputs found

    Dynamics of a heavy particle in a Luttinger liquid

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of a heavy particle of mass MM moving in a one-dimensional repulsively interacting Fermi gas. The Fermi gas is described using the Luttinger model and bosonization. By transforming to a frame co-moving with the heavy particle, we map the model onto a generalized ``quantum impurity problem". A renormalization group calculation reveals a crossover from strong to weak coupling upon scaling down in temperature. Above the crossover temperature scale T=(m/M)EFT^*=(m/M) E_F, the particle's mobility, μ\mu, is found to be (roughly) temperature independent and proportional to the dimensionless conductance, gg, characterizing the 1d Luttinger liquid. Here mm(<<M<<M) is the fermion mass, and EFE_F is the Fermi energy. Below TT^*, in the weak coupling regime, the mobility grows and diverges as μ(T)T4\mu(T) \sim T^{-4} in T0T \to 0 limit.Comment: 6 pages, RevteX, UC

    Tailoring Graphene with Metals on Top

    Full text link
    We study the effects of metallic doping on the electronic properties of graphene using density functional theory in the local density approximation in the presence of a local charging energy (LDA+U). The electronic properties are sensitive to whether graphene is doped with alkali or transition metals. We estimate the the charge transfer from a single layer of Potassium on top of graphene in terms of the local charging energy of the graphene sheet. The coating of graphene with a non-magnetic layer of Palladium, on the other hand, can lead to a magnetic instability in coated graphene due to the hybridization between the transition-metal and the carbon orbitals.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Pseudoparticle-operator description of an interacting Bose gas

    Full text link
    We write the Hamiltonian of the Bose gas with two-body repulsive δ\delta-function potential in a pseudoparticle operator basis which diagonalizes the problem via the Bethe ansatz. In this operator basis the original bosonic interactions are represented by zero-momentum forward-scattering interactions between Landau-liquid pseudoparticles. We find that this pseudoparticle operator algebra is complete: {\it all} the Hamiltonian eigenstates are generated by acting pseudoparticle operators on the system vacuum. It is shown that one boson of vanishing momentum and energy is a composite of a one-pseudoparticle excitation and a collective pseudoparticle excitation. These excitations have finite opposite momenta and cannot be decomposed. Our formalism enables us to calculate the various quantities which characterize the static and dynamic behavior of the system at low energies.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures (they can be obtained by ordinary mail), RevTeX 3.0, preprint UIU

    Evidence for Lattice Effects at the Charge-Ordering Transition in (TMTTF)2_2X

    Full text link
    High-resolution thermal expansion measurements have been performed for exploring the mysterious "structureless transition" in (TMTTF)2_{2}X (X = PF6_{6} and AsF6_{6}), where charge ordering at TCOT_{CO} coincides with the onset of ferroelectric order. Particularly distinct lattice effects are found at TCOT_{CO} in the uniaxial expansivity along the interstack c*\textbf{\textit{c*}}-direction. We propose a scheme involving a charge modulation along the TMTTF stacks and its coupling to displacements of the counteranions X^{-}. These anion shifts, which lift the inversion symmetry enabling ferroelectric order to develop, determine the 3D charge pattern without ambiguity. Evidence is found for another anomaly for both materials at TintT_{int} \simeq 0.6 \cdot TCOT_{CO} indicative of a phase transition related to the charge ordering

    Exotic Superconducting Phases of Ultracold Atom Mixtures on Triangular Lattices

    Full text link
    We study the phase diagram of two-dimensional Bose-Fermi mixtures of ultracold atoms on a triangular optical lattice, in the limit when the velocity of bosonic condensate fluctuations is much larger than the Fermi velocity. We contrast this work with our previous results for a square lattice system in Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 97}, 030601 (2006). Using functional renormalization group techniques we show that the phase diagrams for a triangular lattice contain exotic superconducting phases. For spin-1/2 fermions on an isotropic lattice we find a competition of ss-, pp-, extended dd-, and ff-wave symmetry, as well as antiferromagnetic order. For an anisotropic lattice, we further find an extended p-wave phase. A Bose-Fermi mixture with spinless fermions on an isotropic lattice shows a competition between pp- and ff-wave symmetry. These phases can be traced back to the geometric shapes of the Fermi surfaces in various regimes, as well as the intrinsic frustration of a triangular lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, extended version, slight modification

    Disordered Kondo Nanoclusters: Effect of Energy Spacing

    Full text link
    Exact diagonalization results for Kondo nanoclusters alloyed with mixed valence impurities show that tuning the {\it energy spacing}, Δ\Delta, drives the system from the Kondo to the RKKY regime. The interplay of Δ\Delta and disorder gives rise to a Δ\Delta versus concentration T=0 phase diagram very rich in structure, where regions with prevailing Kondo or RKKY correlations alternate with domains of ferromagnetic order. The local Kondo temperatures, TKT_K, and RKKY interactions depend strongly on the local environment and are overall {\it enhanced} by disorder, in contrast to the hypothesis of ``Kondo disorder'' single-impurity models.Comment: 4pages 4 figuresDisordered Kondo Nanoclusters: Effect of Energy Spacin

    Theory of Spin Fluctuations in Striped Phases of Doped Antiferromagnetic Cuprates

    Full text link
    We study the properties of generalized striped phases of doped cuprate planar quantum antiferromagnets. We invoke an effective, spatially anisotropic, non-linear sigma model in two space dimensions. Our theoretical predictions are in quantitative agreement with recent experiments in La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 with 0x0.0180 \leq x \leq 0.018. We focus on (i) the magnetic correlation length, (ii) the staggered magnetization at T=0T=0 and (iii) the N\'eel temperature, as functions of doping, using parameters determined previously and independently for this system. These results support the proposal that the low doping (antiferromagnetic) phase of the cuprates has a striped configuration.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex. To appear in the Proceedings of the International Conference "Stripes, Lattice Instabilities and High Tc Superconductivity", (Rome, Dec. 1996
    corecore