99 research outputs found
Deriving the one-electron Spectral Function for the 1D Hubbard Model
This pre-print deals with the one dimensional Hubbard model, as described by
the Pseudofermion Dynamical Theory (PDT), with the purpose of (1) deriving a
novel expression for the one electron spectral function for all values of the
on-site repulsion and filling , at vanishing magnetisation
, and (2) discover how to correctly compare the results
originating from two different theoretical frameworks in the limit, as a first-test of the novel expressions obtained in this paper.
Thus, an exact expression of the spectral function is obtained, which is
furthermore successfully compared with previously known results in the limit.
Following the PDT, the expression for the one electron spectral function
factorises into a spin part and a charge part for all values of the on-site
repulsion , where the dynamical quantum objects are spin zero and
-spin (charge) zero singlet pairs of so-called rotated electrons, which
in turn are obtained from the original electrons by a unitary transformation.
The spectral function is exemplified for , with the purpose of
comparing it with the same function obtained by other authors (and other means)
in the limit.
The main pillars of the PDT is presented in a summarised form. For example,
we will only be interested in excited energy eigenstates which originate the
most significant singular features of the spectral map in the
plane, safely ignoring higher order contributions. Even though emphasis is
given on step-by-step derivations where necessary, derivations that have been
done elsewhere and/or do not notably contribute to the physical understanding,
are sometimes avoided. Therefore, references for further study are given
throughout the paper.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures. version-edit: title page now contains correct
contact informatio
Dynamical Functions of a 1D Correlated Quantum Liquid
We extend to initial ground states with zero spin density m = 0 the
expressions provided by the pseudofermion dynamical theory (PDT) for the
finite-energy one- and two-electron spectral-weight distributions of a
one-dimensional (1D) correlated metal with on-site particle-particle repulsion.
The spectral-function expressions derived in this paper were used in recent
successful and detailed theoretical studies of the finite-energy singular
features in photoemission of the organic compound
tetrathiafulvalene-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TTF-TCNQ) metallic phase. Our
studies take into account spectral contributions from types of microscopic
processes that do not occur for finite values of the spin density. Expressions
for the spectral functions in the vicinity of the singular border lines which
also appear in the TTF- TCNQ spectral-weight distribution are derived. In
addition, the PDT expressions are generalized for electronic densities in the
vicinity of half filling. Further details on the processes involved in the
applications to TTF-TCNQ are reported. Our results are useful for the further
understanding of the unusual spectral properties observed in low-dimensional
organic metals and also provide expressions for the one- and two-atom spectral
functions of a correlated quantum system of ultracold fermionic atoms in a 1D
optical lattice with on-site two-atom repulsion
Scattering mechanisms and spectral properties of the one-dimensional Hubbard model
It is found that the finite-energy spectral properties of the one-dimensional
Hubbard model are controlled by the scattering of charged -spin-zero
-holon composite objects, spin-zero -spinon composite objects, and
charged -spin-less and spin-less objects, rather than by the scattering
of independent -spin 1/2 holons and spin 1/2 spinons. Here . The corresponding matrix is calculated and its relation to the
spectral properties is clarified.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
The TTF finite-energy spectral features in photoemission of TTF-TCNQ: The Hubbard-chain description
A dynamical theory which accounts for all microscopic one-electron processes
is used to study the spectral function of the 1D Hubbard model for the whole
-plane, beyond previous studies which focused on the weight
distribution in the vicinity of the singular branch lines only. While our
predictions agree with those of the latter studies concerning the
tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ) related singular features in photoemission of
the organic compound tetrathiafulvalene-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TTF-TCNQ)
metallic phase, the generalized theory also leads to quantitative agreement
concerning the tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) related finite-energy spectral
features, which are found to correspond to a value of the on-site repulsion
larger than for TCNQ. Our study reveals the microscopic mechanisms behind the
unusual spectral features of TTF-TCNQ and provides a good overall description
of those features for the whole -plane.Comment: To appear in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
Electron-electron interaction effects on the photophysics of metallic single-walled carbon nanotubes
Single-walled carbon nanotubes are strongly correlated systems with large
Coulomb repulsion between two electrons occupying the same orbital.
Within a molecular Hamiltonian appropriate for correlated -electron
systems, we show that optical excitations polarized parallel to the nanotube
axes in the so-called metallic single-walled carbon nanotubes are to excitons.
Our calculated absolute exciton energies in twelve different metallic
single-walled carbon nanotubes, with diameters in the range 0.8 - 1.4 nm, are
in nearly quantitative agreement with experimental results. We have also
calculated the absorption spectrum for the (21,21) single-walled carbon
nanotube in the E region. Our calculated spectrum gives an excellent fit
to the experimental absorption spectrum. In all cases our calculated exciton
binding energies are only slightly smaller than those of semiconducting
nanotubes with comparable diameters, in contradiction to results obtained
within the {\it ab initio} approach, which predicts much smaller binding
energies. We ascribe this difference to the difficulty of determining the
behavior of systems with strong on-site Coulomb interactions within theories
based on the density functional approach. As in the semiconducting nanotubes we
predict in the metallic nanotubes a two-photon exciton above the lowest
longitudinally polarized exciton that can be detected by ultrafast pump-probe
spectroscopy. We also predict a subgap absorption polarized perpendicular to
the nanotube axes below the lowest longitudinal exciton, blueshifted from the
exact midgap by electron-electron interactions
Tracking spin and charge with spectroscopy in spin-polarised 1D systems
We calculate the spectral function of a one-dimensional strongly interacting
chain of fermions, where the response can be well understood in terms of spinon
and holon excitations. Upon increasing the spin imbalance between the spin
species, we observe the single-electron response of the fully polarised system
to emanate from the holon peak while the spinon response vanishes. For
experimental setups that probe one-dimensional properties, we propose this
method as an additional generic tool to aid the identification of spectral
structures, e.g. in ARPES measurements. We show that this applies even to
trapped systems having cold atomic gas experiments in mind.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Spectral microscopic mechanisms and quantum phase transitions in a 1D correlated problem
In this paper we study the dominant microscopic processes that generate
nearly the whole one-electron removal and addition spectral weight of the
one-dimensional Hubbard model for all values of the on-site repulsion . We
find that for the doped Mott-Hubbard insulator there is a competition between
the microscopic processes that generate the one-electron upper-Hubbard band
spectral-weight distributions of the Mott-Hubbard insulating phase and
finite-doping-concentration metallic phase, respectively. The spectral-weight
distributions generated by the non-perturbative processes studied here are
shown elsewhere to agree quantitatively for the whole momentum and energy
bandwidth with the peak dispersions observed by angle-resolved photoelectron
spectroscopy in quasi-one-dimensional compounds.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Finite-Energy Spectral-Weight Distributions of a 1D Correlated Metal
We derive general closed-form analytical expressions for the finite-energy
one- and two-electron spectral-weight distributions of an one-dimensional
correlated metal with on-site electronic repulsion. Our results also provide
general expressions for the one- and two-atom spectral functions of a
correlated quantum system of cold fermionic atoms in a one-dimensional optical
lattice with on-site atomic repulsion. In the limit of zero spin density our
spectral-function expressions provide the correct zero-spin density results.
Our results reveal the dominant non-perturbative microscopic many-particle
mechanisms behind the exotic spectral properties observed in
quasi-one-dimensional metals and correlated systems of cold fermionic atoms in
one-dimensional optical lattices.Comment: 30 pages, no figure
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