4,969 research outputs found

    Angle-resolved photoemission spectra in the cuprates from the d-density wave theory

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    Angle-resolved photoemission spectra present two challenges for the d-density wave (DDW) theory of the pseudogap state of the cuprates: (1) hole pockets near (Ï€/2,Ï€/2)(\pi/2,\pi/2) are not observed, in apparent contradiction with the assumption of translational symmetry breaking, and (2) there are no well-defined quasiparticles at the {\it antinodal} points, in contradiction with the predictions of mean-field theory of this broken symmetry state. Here, we show how these puzzles can be resolved.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, RevTex

    Social identity, group composition and public good provision: an experimental study

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    Social fragmentation has been identified as a potential cause for the under-provision of public goods in developing nations, as well as in urban communities in developed countries such as the U.S. We study the effect of social fragmentation on public good provision using laboratory experiments. We create two artificial social groups in the lab and we assign subjects belonging to both groups to a public good game. The treatment variable is the relative size of each social group, which is a proxy for social fragmentation. We find that while higher social fragmentation leads to lower public good provision, this effect is short-lived. Furthermore, social homogeneity does not lead to higher levels of contributions.Social Identity, Public Goods, Social Fragmentation, Experiments.

    Floating phase in a dissipative Josephson junction array

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    We consider dissipative quantum phase transitions in Josephson junction arrays and show that the disordered phase in this extended system can be viewed as an unusual floating phase in which the states of local (0+1)(0+1)-dimensional elements (single Josephson junctions) can slide past each other despite arbitrary range spatial couplings among them. The unusual character of the metal-superconductor quantum critical point can be tested by measurements of the current voltage characteristic. This may be the simplest and most natural example of a floating phase.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex4. The revised version contains higher order renormalization group equations and the corresponding phase diagra

    An ab initio path integral Monte Carlo simulation method for molecules and clusters: application to Li_4 and Li_5^+

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    A novel method for simulating the statistical mechanics of molecular systems in which both nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom are treated quantum mechanically is presented. The scheme combines a path integral description of the nuclear variables with a first-principles adiabatic description of the electronic structure. The electronic problem is solved for the ground state within a density functional approach, with the electronic orbitals expanded in a localized (Gaussian) basis set. The discretized path integral is computed by a Metropolis Monte Carlo sampling technique on the normal modes of the isomorphic ring-polymer. An effective short-time action correct to order Ï„4\tau^4 is used. The validity and performance of the method are tested in two small Lithium clusters, namely Li4_4 and Li5+_5^+. Structural and electronic properties computed within this fully quantum-mechanical scheme are presented and compared to those obtained within the classical nuclei approximation. Quantum delocalization effects are significant but tunneling turns out to be irrelevant at low temperatures.Comment: 11 text pages, 7 figures, to be published in J. Chem. Phy

    Classification of the line-soliton solutions of KPII

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    In the previous papers (notably, Y. Kodama, J. Phys. A 37, 11169-11190 (2004), and G. Biondini and S. Chakravarty, J. Math. Phys. 47 033514 (2006)), we found a large variety of line-soliton solutions of the Kadomtsev-Petviashvili II (KPII) equation. The line-soliton solutions are solitary waves which decay exponentially in (x,y)(x,y)-plane except along certain rays. In this paper, we show that those solutions are classified by asymptotic information of the solution as ∣y∣→∞|y| \to \infty. Our study then unravels some interesting relations between the line-soliton classification scheme and classical results in the theory of permutations.Comment: 30 page

    An explanation for a universality of transition temperatures in families of copper oxide superconductors

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    A remarkable mystery of the copper oxide high-transition-temperature (Tc) superconductors is the dependence of Tc on the number of CuO2 layers, n, in the unit cell of a crystal. In a given family of these superconductors, Tc rises with the number of layers, reaching a peak at n=3, and then declines: the result is a bell-shaped curve. Despite the ubiquity of this phenomenon, it is still poorly understood and attention has instead been mainly focused on the properties of a single CuO2 plane. Here we show that the quantum tunnelling of Cooper pairs between the layers simply and naturally explains the experimental results, when combined with the recently quantified charge imbalance of the layers and the latest notion of a competing order nucleated by this charge imbalance that suppresses superconductivity. We calculate the bell-shaped curve and show that, if materials can be engineered so as to minimize the charge imbalance as n increases, Tc can be raised further.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. The version published in Natur

    Do Bid-Ask Spreads Or Bid and Ask Depths Convey New Information First?

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    This paper investigates the order in which new information is first reflected in the market – through changes in spreads or through updated depths. We develop an error correction model of spreads and depths and estimate Gonzalo-Granger common factor components using two years of tick-by-tick quote data on all stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. We show that indeed depths rather than spreads are first to impound new information that leads to new quote trends. Specifically, (bid and ask) depths convey information first in virtually every stock in both years, while spreads almost never convey information in 1998, and do so in only 8 out of 30 cases in 1995. Even in those 8 cases, the percentage of new information revealed by spreads ranges from 50 – 59% with the depths accounting for the rest. Our results have important implications for academic research on asymmetric information trading, for security market design, and for public policy.VECM, spreads, depths, information,

    Quantum disordered phase in a doped antiferromagnet

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    A quantitative description of the transition to a quantum disordered phase in a doped antiferromagnet is obtained with a U(1) gauge-theory, where the gap in the spin-wave spectrum determines the strength of the gauge-fields. They mediate an attractive long-range interaction whose possible bound-states correspond to charge-spin separation and pairing.Comment: 11 pages, LaTex, chris-preprint-1994-
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