97 research outputs found
Transport Properties and Density of States of Quantum Wires with Off-diagonal Disorder
We review recent work on the random hopping problem in a
quasi-one-dimensional geometry of N coupled chains (quantum wire with
off-diagonal disorder). Both density of states and conductance show a
remarkable dependence on the parity of N. The theory is compared to numerical
simulations.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in Physica E (special issue on Dynamics of Complex
Systems); 6 figure
Electronic transport through ballistic chaotic cavities: reflection symmetry, direct processes, and symmetry breaking
We extend previous studies on transport through ballistic chaotic cavities
with spatial left-right (LR) reflection symmetry to include the presence of
direct processes. We first analyze fully LR-symmetric systems in the presence
of direct processes and compare the distribution w(T) of the transmission
coefficient T with that for an asymmetric cavity with the same "optical" S
matrix. We then study the problem of "external mixing" of the symmetry caused
by an asymmetric coupling of the cavity to the outside. We first consider the
case where symmetry breaking arises because two symmetrically positioned
waveguides are coupled to the cavity by means of asymmetric tunnel barriers.
Although this system is asymmetric with respect to the LR operation, it has a
striking memory of the symmetry of the cavity it was constructed from.
Secondly, we break LR symmetry in the absence of direct proceses by
asymmetrically positioning the two waveguides and compare the results with
those for the completely asymmetric case.Comment: 15 pages, 8 Postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
One Dimensional Chain with Long Range Hopping
The one-dimensional (1D) tight binding model with random nearest neighbor
hopping is known to have a singularity of the density of states and of the
localization length at the band center. We study numerically the effects of
random long range (power-law) hopping with an ensemble averaged magnitude
\expectation{|t_{ij}|} \propto |i-j|^{-\sigma} in the 1D chain, while
maintaining the particle-hole symmetry present in the nearest neighbor model.
We find, in agreement with results of position space renormalization group
techniques applied to the random XY spin chain with power-law interactions,
that there is a change of behavior when the power-law exponent becomes
smaller than 2
Universal Correlations of Coulomb Blockade Conductance Peaks and the Rotation Scaling in Quantum Dots
We show that the parametric correlations of the conductance peak amplitudes
of a chaotic or weakly disordered quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime
become universal upon an appropriate scaling of the parameter. We compute the
universal forms of this correlator for both cases of conserved and broken time
reversal symmetry. For a symmetric dot the correlator is independent of the
details in each lead such as the number of channels and their correlation. We
derive a new scaling, which we call the rotation scaling, that can be computed
directly from the dot's eigenfunction rotation rate or alternatively from the
conductance peak heights, and therefore does not require knowledge of the
spectrum of the dot. The relation of the rotation scaling to the level velocity
scaling is discussed. The exact analytic form of the conductance peak
correlator is derived at short distances. We also calculate the universal
distributions of the average level width velocity for various values of the
scaled parameter. The universality is illustrated in an Anderson model of a
disordered dot.Comment: 35 pages, RevTex, 6 Postscript figure
Classical trajectories in quantum transport at the band center of bipartite lattices with or without vacancies
Here we report on several anomalies in quantum transport at the band center
of a bipartite lattice with vacancies that are surely due to its chiral
symmetry, namely: no weak localization effect shows up, and, when leads have a
single channel the transmission is either one or zero. We propose that these
are a consequence of both the chiral symmetry and the large number of states at
the band center. The probability amplitude associated to the eigenstate that
gives unit transmission ressembles a classical trajectory both with or without
vacancies. The large number of states allows to build up trajectories that
elude the blocking vacancies explaining the absence of weak localization.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Fokker-Planck equations and density of states in disordered quantum wires
We propose a general scheme to construct scaling equations for the density of
states in disordered quantum wires for all ten pure Cartan symmetry classes.
The anomalous behavior of the density of states near the Fermi level for the
three chiral and four Bogoliubov-de Gennes universality classes is analysed in
detail by means of a mapping to a scaling equation for the reflection from a
quantum wire in the presence of an imaginary potential.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, revised versio
Bosonic Excitations in Random Media
We consider classical normal modes and non-interacting bosonic excitations in
disordered systems. We emphasise generic aspects of such problems and parallels
with disordered, non-interacting systems of fermions, and discuss in particular
the relevance for bosonic excitations of symmetry classes known in the
fermionic context. We also stress important differences between bosonic and
fermionic problems. One of these follows from the fact that ground state
stability of a system requires all bosonic excitation energy levels to be
positive, while stability in systems of non-interacting fermions is ensured by
the exclusion principle, whatever the single-particle energies. As a
consequence, simple models of uncorrelated disorder are less useful for bosonic
systems than for fermionic ones, and it is generally important to study the
excitation spectrum in conjunction with the problem of constructing a
disorder-dependent ground state: we show how a mapping to an operator with
chiral symmetry provides a useful tool for doing this. A second difference
involves the distinction for bosonic systems between excitations which are
Goldstone modes and those which are not. In the case of Goldstone modes we
review established results illustrating the fact that disorder decouples from
excitations in the low frequency limit, above a critical dimension , which
in different circumstances takes the values and . For bosonic
excitations which are not Goldstone modes, we argue that an excitation density
varying with frequency as is a universal
feature in systems with ground states that depend on the disorder realisation.
We illustrate our conclusions with extensive analytical and some numerical
calculations for a variety of models in one dimension
Universality of Parametric Spectral Correlations: Local versus Extended Perturbing Potentials
We explore the influence of an arbitrary external potential perturbation V on
the spectral properties of a weakly disordered conductor. In the framework of a
statistical field theory of a nonlinear sigma-model type we find, depending on
the range and the profile of the external perturbation, two qualitatively
different universal regimes of parametric spectral statistics (i.e.
cross-correlations between the spectra of Hamiltonians H and H+V). We identify
the translational invariance of the correlations in the space of Hamiltonians
as the key indicator of universality, and find the connection between the
coordinate system in this space which makes the translational invariance
manifest, and the physically measurable properties of the system. In
particular, in the case of localized perturbations, the latter turn out to be
the eigenphases of the scattering matrix for scattering off the perturbing
potential V. They also have a purely statistical interpretation in terms of the
moments of the level velocity distribution. Finally, on the basis of this
analysis, a set of results obtained recently by the authors using random matrix
theory methods is shown to be applicable to a much wider class of disordered
and chaotic structures.Comment: 16 pages, 7 eps figures (minor changes and reference [17] added
The random phase property and the Lyapunov Spectrum for disordered multi-channel systems
A random phase property establishing in the weak coupling limit a link between quasi-one-dimensional random Schrödinger operators and full random matrix theory is advocated. Briefly summarized it states that the random transfer matrices placed into a normal system of coordinates act on the isotropic frames and lead to a Markov process with a unique invariant measure which is of geometric nature. On the elliptic part of the transfer matrices, this measure is invariant under the unitaries in the hermitian symplectic group of the universality class under study. While the random phase property can up to now only be proved in special models or in a restricted sense, we provide strong numerical evidence that it holds in the Anderson model of localization. A main outcome of the random phase property is a perturbative calculation of the Lyapunov exponents which shows that the Lyapunov spectrum is equidistant and that the localization lengths for large systems in the unitary, orthogonal and symplectic ensemble differ by a factor 2 each. In an Anderson-Ando model on a tubular geometry with magnetic field and spin-orbit coupling, the normal system of coordinates is calculated and this is used to derive explicit energy dependent formulas for the Lyapunov spectrum
Exact spectra, spin susceptibilities and order parameter of the quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the triangular lattice
Exact spectra of periodic samples are computed up to .
Evidence of an extensive set of low lying levels, lower than the softest
magnons, is exhibited.
These low lying quantum states are degenerated in the thermodynamic limit;
their symmetries and dynamics as well as their finite-size scaling are strong
arguments in favor of N\'eel order.
It is shown that the N\'eel order parameter agrees with first-order spin-wave
calculations. A simple explanation of the low energy dynamics is given as well
as the numerical determinations of the energies, order parameter and spin
susceptibilities of the studied samples. It is shown how suitable boundary
conditions, which do not frustrate N\'eel order, allow the study of samples
with spins.
A thorough study of these situations is done in parallel with the more
conventional case .Comment: 36 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 13 figures available upon request, LPTL
preprin
- …