6,773 research outputs found
Electron Correlation Driven Heavy-Fermion Formation in LiV2O4
Optical reflectivity measurements were performed on a single crystal of the
d-electron heavy-fermion (HF) metal LiV2O4. The results evidence the highly
incoherent character of the charge dynamics for all temperatures above T^*
\approx 20 K. The spectral weight of the optical conductivity is redistributed
over extremely broad energy scales (~ 5 eV) as the quantum coherence of the
charge carriers is recovered. This wide redistribution is, in sharp contrast to
f-electron Kondo lattice HF systems, characteristic of a metallic system close
to a correlation driven insulating state. Our results thus reveal that strong
electronic correlation effects dominate the low-energy charge dynamics and
heavy quasiparticle formation in LiV2O4. We propose the geometrical
frustration, which limits the extension of charge and spin ordering, as an
additional key ingredient of the low-temperature heavy-fermion formation in
this system.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
High-Precision Thermodynamic and Critical Properties from Tensor Renormalization-Group Flows
The recently developed tensor renormalization-group (TRG) method provides a
highly precise technique for deriving thermodynamic and critical properties of
lattice Hamiltonians. The TRG is a local coarse-graining transformation, with
the elements of the tensor at each lattice site playing the part of the
interactions that undergo the renormalization-group flows. These tensor flows
are directly related to the phase diagram structure of the infinite system,
with each phase flowing to a distinct surface of fixed points. Fixed-point
analysis and summation along the flows give the critical exponents, as well as
thermodynamic functions along the entire temperature range. Thus, for the
ferromagnetic triangular lattice Ising model, the free energy is calculated to
better than 10^-5 along the entire temperature range. Unlike previous
position-space renormalization-group methods, the truncation (of the tensor
index range D) in this general method converges under straightforward and
systematic improvements. Our best results are easily obtained with D = 24,
corresponding to 4624-dimensional renormalization-group flows.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Motion plan changes predictably in dyadic reaching
Parents can effortlessly assist their child to walk, but the mechanism behind such physical coordination is still unknown. Studies have suggested that physical coordination is achieved by interacting humans who update their movement or motion plan in response to the partner's behaviour. Here, we tested rigidly coupled pairs in a joint reaching task to observe such changes in the partners' motion plans. However, the joint reaching movements were surprisingly consistent across different trials. A computational model that we developed demonstrated that the two partners had a distinct motion plan, which did not change with time. These results suggest that rigidly coupled pairs accomplish joint reaching movements by relying on a pre-programmed motion plan that is independent of the partner's behaviour
Method of Collective Degrees of Freedom in Spin Coherent State Path Integral
We present a detailed field theoretic description of those collective degrees
of freedom (CDF) which are relevant to study macroscopic quantum dynamics of a
quasi-one-dimensional ferromagnetic domain wall. We apply spin coherent state
path integral (SCSPI) in the proper discrete time formalism (a) to extract the
relevant CDF's, namely, the center position and the chirality of the domain
wall, which originate from the translation and the rotation invariances of the
system in question, and (b) to derive effective action for the CDF's by
elimination of environmental zero-modes with the help of the {\it Faddeev-Popov
technique}. The resulting effective action turns out to be such that both the
center position and the chirality can be formally described by boson coherent
state path integral. However, this is only formal; there is a subtle departure
from the latter.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Differentiation and Replication of Spots in a Reaction Diffusion System with Many Chemicals
The replication and differentiation of spots in reaction diffusion equations
are studied by extending the Gray-Scott model with self-replicating spots to
include many degrees of freedom needed to model systems with many chemicals. By
examining many possible reaction networks, the behavior of this model is
categorized into three types: replication of homogeneous fixed spots,
replication of oscillatory spots, and differentiation from `m ultipotent
spots'. These multipotent spots either replicate or differentiate into other
types of spots with different fixed-point dynamics, and as a result, an
inhomogeneous pattern of spots is formed. This differentiation process of spots
is analyzed in terms of the loss of chemical diversity and decrease of the
local Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy. The relevance of the results to developmental
cell biology and stem cells is also discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, Submitted to EP
Quantum Signatures of The Classical Disconnection Border
A quantum Heisenberg model with anisotropic coupling and all-to-all
interaction has been analyzed using the Bose-Einstein statistics. In
Ref.\cite{jsp} the existence of a classical energy disconnection border (EDB)
in the same kind of models has been demonstrated. We address here the problem
to find quantum signatures of the EDB. An independent definition of a quantum
disconnection border, motivated by considerations strictly valid in the quantum
regime is given. We also discuss the dynamical relevance of the quantum border
with respect to quantum magnetic reversal. Contrary to the classical case the
magnetization can flip even below the EDB through Macroscopic Quantum
Tunneling. We evaluate the time scale for magnetic reversal from statistical
and spectral properties, for a small number of particles and in the
semiclassical limit.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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