71 research outputs found
Symmetric Hubbard Systems with Superconducting Magnetic Response
In purely repulsive, -symmetric Hubbard clusters a correlation effect
produces an effective two-body attraction and pairing; the key ingredient is
the availability of W=0 pairs, that is, two-body solutions of appropriate
symmetry. We study the tunneling of bound pairs in rings of 5-site units
connected by weak intercell links; each unit has the topology of a CuO
cluster and a repulsive interaction is included on every site. Further, we test
the superconducting nature of the response of this model to a threading
magnetic field. We present a detailed numerical study of the two-unit ring
filled with 6 particles and the three-unit ring with 8 particles; in both cases
a lower filling yields normal behavior. In previous studies on 1d Hubbard
chains, level crossings were reported (half-integer or fractional Aharonov-Bohm
effect) which however cannot be due to superconducting pairs. In contrast, the
nontrivial basis of clusters carrying W=0 pairs leads to genuine
Superconducting Flux Quantization (SFQ). The data are understood in terms of a
cell-perturbation theory scheme which is very accurate for weak links. This
low-energy approach leads to an effective hard core boson Hamiltonian which
naturally describes itinerant pairs and SFQ in mesoscopic rings. For the
numerical calculations, we take advantage of a recently proposed exact
diagonalization technique which can be generally applied to many-fermion
problems and drastically reduces the size of the matrices to be handled.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Optical trapping and critical Casimir forces
Critical Casimir forces emerge between objects, such as colloidal particles,
whenever their surfaces spatially confine the fluctuations of the order
parameter of a critical liquid used as a solvent. These forces act at short but
microscopically large distances between these objects, reaching often hundreds
of nanometers. Keeping colloids at such distances is a major experimental
challenge, which can be addressed by the means of optical tweezers. Here, we
review how optical tweezers have been successfully used to quantitatively study
critical Casimir forces acting on particles in suspensions. As we will see, the
use of optical tweezers to experimentally study critical Casimir forces can
play a crucial role in developing nano-technologies, representing an innovative
way to realize self-assembled devices at the nano- and microscale.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
Speckle Optical Tweezers: Micromanipulation with Random Light Fields
Current optical manipulation techniques rely on carefully engineered setups
and samples. Although similar conditions are routinely met in research
laboratories, it is still a challenge to manipulate microparticles when the
environment is not well controlled and known a priori, since optical
imperfections and scattering limit the applicability of this technique to
real-life situations, such as in biomedical or microfluidic applications.
Nonetheless, scattering of coherent light by disordered structures gives rise
to speckles, random diffraction patterns with well-defined statistical
properties. Here, we experimentally demonstrate how speckle fields can become a
versatile tool to efficiently perform fundamental optical manipulation tasks
such as trapping, guiding and sorting. We anticipate that the simplicity of
these "speckle optical tweezers" will greatly broaden the perspectives of
optical manipulation for real-life applications
"Spin-Disentangled" Exact Diagonalization of Repulsive Hubbard Systems: Superconducting Pair Propagation
By a novel exact diagonalization technique we show that bound pairs propagate
between repulsive Hubbard clusters in a superconducting fashion. The size of
the matrices that must be handled depends on the number of fermion
configurations {\em per spin}, which is of the order of the square root of the
overall size of the Hilbert space. We use CuO units connected by weak O-O
links to model interplanar coupling and c-axis superconductivity in Cuprates.
The numerical evidence on CuO and CuO prompts a new
analytic scheme describing the propagation of bound pairs and also the
superconducting flux quantization in a 3-d geometry.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Controlling the dynamics of colloidal particles by critical Casimir forces
Critical Casimir forces can play an important role for applications in nano-science and nano-technology, owing to their piconewton strength, nanometric action range, fine tunability as a function of temperature, and exquisite dependence on the surface properties of the involved
objects. Here, we investigate the effects of critical Casimir forces on the free dynamics of a pair of colloidal particles dispersed in the bulk of a near-critical binary liquid solvent, using blinking optical tweezers. In particular, we measure the time evolution of the distance between the two colloids to determine their relative diffusion and drift velocity. Furthermore, we show how critical Casimir forces change the dynamic properties of this two-colloid system by studying the
temperature dependence of the distribution of the so-called first-passage time, i. e., of the time necessary for the particles to reach for the first time a certain separation, starting from an
initially assigned one. These data are in good agreement with theoretical results obtained from Monte Carlo simulations and Langevin dynamics
Correction: Controlling the dynamics of colloidal particles by critical Casimir forces.
Correction for 'Controlling the dynamics of colloidal particles by critical Casimir forces' by Alessandro Magazzù et al., Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 2152–2162, DOI: 10.1039/C8SM01376D
Repulsion-Sustained Supercurrent and Flux Quantization in Rings of Symmetric Hubbard Clusters
We test the response to a threading magnetic field of rings of 5-site
-symmetric repulsive Hubbard clusters connected by weak intercell
links; each 5-site unit has the topology of a CuO cluster and a repulsive
interaction is included on every site. In a numerical study of the three-unit
ring with 8 particles, we take advantage of a novel exact-diagonalization
technique which can be generally applied to many-fermion problems. For O-O
hopping we find Superconducting Flux Quantization (SFQ), but for purely Cu-Cu
links bound pair propagation is hindered by symmetry. The results agree with
W=0 pairing theory.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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