661 research outputs found
Nematicity as a route to a magnetic field-induced spin density wave order; application to the high temperature cuprates
The electronic nematic order characterized by broken rotational symmetry has
been suggested to play an important role in the phase diagram of the high
temperature cuprates. We study the interplay between the electronic nematic
order and a spin density wave order in the presence of a magnetic field. We
show that a cooperation of the nematicity and the magnetic field induces a
finite coupling between the spin density wave and spin-triplet staggered flux
orders. As a consequence of such a coupling, the magnon gap decreases as the
magnetic field increases, and it eventually condenses beyond a critical
magnetic field leading to a field-induced spin density wave order. Both
commensurate and incommensurate orders are studied, and the experimental
implications of our findings are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical renormalization group methods in theory of eternal inflation
Dynamics of eternal inflation on the landscape admits description in terms of
the Martin-Siggia-Rose (MSR) effective field theory that is in one-to-one
correspondence with vacuum dynamics equations. On those sectors of the
landscape, where transport properties of the probability measure for eternal
inflation are important, renormalization group fixed points of the MSR
effective action determine late time behavior of the probability measure. I
argue that these RG fixed points may be relevant for the solution of the gauge
invariance problem for eternal inflation.Comment: 11 pages; invited mini-review for Grav.Cos
On the divergences of inflationary superhorizon perturbations
We discuss the infrared divergences that appear to plague cosmological
perturbation theory. We show that within the stochastic framework they are
regulated by eternal inflation so that the theory predicts finite fluctuations.
Using the formalism to one loop, we demonstrate that the infrared
modes can be absorbed into additive constants and the coefficients of the
diagrammatic expansion for the connected parts of two and three-point functions
of the curvature perturbation. As a result, the use of any infrared cutoff
below the scale of eternal inflation is permitted, provided that the background
fields are appropriately redefined. The natural choice for the infrared cutoff
would of course be the present horizon; other choices manifest themselves in
the running of the correlators. We also demonstrate that it is possible to
define observables that are renormalization group invariant. As an example, we
derive a non-perturbative, infrared finite and renormalization point
independent relation between the two-point correlators of the curvature
perturbation for the case of the free single field.Comment: 12 page
SO(4) Theory of Competition between Triplet Superconductivity and Antiferromagnetism in Bechgaard Salts
Motivated by recent experiments with Bechgaard salts, we investigate the
competition between antiferromagnetism and triplet superconductivity in quasi
one-dimensional electron systems. We unify the two orders in an SO(4) symmetric
framework, and demonstrate the existence of such symmetry in one-dimensional
Luttinger liquids. SO(4) symmetry, which strongly constrains the phase diagram,
can explain coexistence regions between antiferromagnetic, superconducting, and
normal phases, as observed in (TMTSF)PF. We predict a sharp neutron
scattering resonance in superconducting samples.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; Added discussion of applicability of SO(4)
symmetry for strongly anisotropic Fermi liquids; Added reference
Quantum and classical criticality in a dimerized quantum antiferromagnet
A quantum critical point (QCP) is a singularity in the phase diagram arising
due to quantum mechanical fluctuations. The exotic properties of some of the
most enigmatic physical systems, including unconventional metals and
superconductors, quantum magnets, and ultracold atomic condensates, have been
related to the importance of the critical quantum and thermal fluctuations near
such a point. However, direct and continuous control of these fluctuations has
been difficult to realize, and complete thermodynamic and spectroscopic
information is required to disentangle the effects of quantum and classical
physics around a QCP. Here we achieve this control in a high-pressure,
high-resolution neutron scattering experiment on the quantum dimer material
TlCuCl3. By measuring the magnetic excitation spectrum across the entire
quantum critical phase diagram, we illustrate the similarities between quantum
and thermal melting of magnetic order. We prove the critical nature of the
unconventional longitudinal ("Higgs") mode of the ordered phase by damping it
thermally. We demonstrate the development of two types of criticality, quantum
and classical, and use their static and dynamic scaling properties to conclude
that quantum and thermal fluctuations can behave largely independently near a
QCP.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Original version, published version available
from Nature Physics websit
The vacuum bubbles in de Sitter background and black hole pair creation
We study the possible types of the nucleation of vacuum bubbles. We classify
vacuum bubbles in de Sitter background and present some numerical solutions.
The thin-wall approximation is employed to obtain the nucleation rate and the
radius of vacuum bubbles. With careful analysis we confirm that Parke's formula
is also applicable to the large true vacuum bubbles. The nucleation of the
false vacuum bubble in de Sitter background is also evaluated. The tunneling
process in the potential with degenerate vacua is analyzed as the limiting
cases of the large true vacuum bubble and false vacuum bubble. Next, we
consider the pair creation of black holes in the background of bubble
solutions. We obtain static bubble wall solutions of junction equation with
black hole pair. The masses of created black holes are uniquely determined by
the cosmological constant and surface tension on the wall. Finally, we obtain
the rate of pair creation of black holes.Comment: 3 figures, minor including errors and typos corrected, and refs.
adde
Exact Gravitational Shockwaves and Planckian Scattering on Branes
We obtain a solution describing a gravitational shockwave propagating along a
Randall-Sundrum brane. The interest of such a solution is twofold: on the one
hand, it is the first exact solution for a localized source on a
Randall-Sundrum three-brane. On the other hand, one can use it to study forward
scattering at Planckian energies, including the effects of the continuum of
Kaluza-Klein modes. We map out the different regimes for the scattering
obtained by varying the center-of-mass energy and the impact parameter. We also
discuss exact shockwaves in ADD scenarios with compact extra dimensions.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. v2: references added, minor improvements and
small errors correcte
The structure of the extreme Schwarzschild-de Sitter space-time
The extreme Schwarzschild-de Sitter space-time is a spherically symmetric
solution of Einstein's equations with a cosmological constant Lambda and mass
parameter m>0 which is characterized by the condition that 9 Lambda m^2=1. The
global structure of this space-time is here analyzed in detail. Conformal and
embedding diagrams are constructed, and synchronous coordinates which are
suitable for a discussion of the cosmic no-hair conjecture are presented. The
permitted geodesic motions are also analyzed. By a careful investigation of the
geodesics and the equations of geodesic deviation, it is shown that specific
families of observers escape from falling into the singularity and approach
nonsingular asymptotic regions which are represented by special "points" in the
complete conformal diagram. The redshift of signals emitted by particles which
fall into the singularity, as detected by those observers which escape, is also
calculated.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, LaTeX, to appear in Gen. Rel. Gra
Off-center collisions in AdS_5 with applications to multiplicity estimates in heavy-ion collisions
We study the trapped surface produced by an off-center collision of
light-like, point-sourced shock waves in anti-de Sitter space. We find an
analytic expression for the shape of the trapped surface in the limit where the
energy of the shock waves is large and the impact parameter is not too large.
We use the area of the trapped surface to estimate a lower bound on the entropy
produced in the collision. We compare our results to particle multiplicity
measurements in heavy-ion collisions as interpreted through the Glauber model.
In an attempt to roughly simulate the effects of asymptotic freedom and
confinement in quantum chromodynamics, we also consider the effects of slicing
off parts of anti-de Sitter space.Comment: 43 pages, 12 figures, 2 appendice
Multi-field Inflation with a Random Potential
Motivated by the possibility of inflation in the cosmic landscape, which may
be approximated by a complicated potential, we study the density perturbations
in multi-field inflation with a random potential. The random potential causes
the inflaton to undergo a Brownian motion with a drift in the D-dimensional
field space. To quantify such an effect, we employ a stochastic approach to
evaluate the two-point and three-point functions of primordial perturbations.
We find that in the weakly random scenario the resulting power spectrum
resembles that of the single field slow-roll case, with up to 2% more red tilt.
The strongly random scenario, leads to rich phenomenologies, such as primordial
fluctuations in the power spectrum on all angular scales. Such features may
already be hiding in the error bars of observed CMB TT (as well as TE and EE)
power spectrum and can be detected or falsified with more data coming in the
future. The tensor power spectrum itself is free of fluctuations and the tensor
to scalar ratio is enhanced. In addition a large negative running of the power
spectral index is possible. Non-Gaussianity is generically suppressed by the
growth of adiabatic perturbations on super-horizon scales, but can possibly be
enhanced by resonant effects or arise from the entropic perturbations during
the onset of (p)reheating. The formalism developed in this paper can be applied
to a wide class of multi-field inflation models including, e.g. the N-flation
scenario.Comment: More clarifications and references adde
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