9,777 research outputs found
Ultrafast Quenching of the Exchange Interaction in a Mott Insulator
We investigate how fast and how effective photocarrier excitation can modify
the exchange interaction in the prototype Mott-Hubbard
insulator. We demonstrate an ultrafast quenching of both by
evaluating exchange integrals from a time-dependent response formalism and by
explicitly simulating laser-induced spin precession in an antiferromagnet that
is canted by an external magnetic field. In both cases, the electron dynamics
is obtained from nonequilibrium dynamical mean-field theory. We find that the
modified emerges already within a few electron hopping times
after the pulse, with a reduction that is comparable to the effect of chemical
doping.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Photo-induced states in a Mott insulator
We investigate the properties of the metallic state obtained by photo-doping
carriers into a Mott insulator. In a strongly interacting system, these
carriers have a long life-time, so that they can dissipate their kinetic energy
to a phonon bath. In the relaxed state, the scattering rate saturates at a
non-zero temperature-independent value, and the momentum-resolved spectral
function features broad bands which differ from the well-defined quasi-particle
bands of a chemically doped system. Our results indicate that a photo-doped
Mott insulator behaves as a bad metal, in which strong scattering between
doublons and holes inhibits Fermi-liquid behavior down to low temperature.Comment: 5 page
Thermalization of a pump-excited Mott insulator
We use nonequilibrium dynamical mean-field theory in combination with a
recently implemented strong-coupling impurity solver to investigate the
relaxation of a Mott insulator after a laser excitation with frequency
comparable to the Hubbard gap. The time evolution of the double occupancy
exhibits a crossover from a strongly damped transient at short times towards an
exponential thermalization at long times. In the limit of strong interactions,
the thermalization time is consistent with the exponentially small decay rate
for artificially created doublons, which was measured in ultracold atomic
gases. When the interaction is comparable to the bandwidth, on the other hand,
the double occupancy thermalizes within a few times the inverse bandwidth along
a rapid thermalization path in which the exponential tail is absent. Similar
behavior can be observed in time-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. Our
results show that a simple quasi-equilibrium description of the electronic
state breaks down for pump-excited Mott insulators characterized by strong
interactions.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Nonthermal steady states after an interaction quench in the Falicov-Kimball model
We present the exact solution of the Falicov-Kimball model after a sudden
change of its interaction parameter using non-equilibrium dynamical mean-field
theory. For different interaction quenches between the homogeneous metallic and
insulating phases the system relaxes to a non-thermal steady state on time
scales on the order of hbar/bandwidth, showing collapse and revival with an
approximate period of h/interaction if the interaction is large. We discuss the
reasons for this behavior and provide a statistical description of the final
steady state by means of generalized Gibbs ensembles.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; published versio
Nocturnal Changes in Knee Cartilage Thickness in Young Healthy Adults
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows one to analyze cartilage physiology in vivo. Cartilage deforms during loading, but little is known about its recovery after deformation. Here we study `nocturnal' changes in knee cartilage thickness and whether postexercise deformation differs between morning and evening. Axial magnetic resonance (MR) images were acquired in the right knees of 17 healthy volunteers (age 23.5 +/- 3.0 years) after a normal day, and then after 30 deep knee bends. Coronal images were additionally acquired in 8 of these volunteers after a normal day and then after 2 min of static loading of the leg with 150% body weight. The volunteers then remained unloaded overnight and the same protocol was repeated in the morning. A significant increase (p < 0.01) in cartilage thickness was observed between evening (preexercise) and morning (preexercise): +2.4% in the patella, +8.4% in the medial tibia and +6.2% in the lateral tibia. Deformation in the morning (-6.8/-4.6/-5.1%) was generally greater than that in the evening (-5.4/-3.2/-3.7%), but this difference did not reach statistical significance. No significant difference in the nocturnal thickness increase (or postexercise deformation) was observed between men and women. We conclude that knee cartilage (thickness) recovers overnight by approximately 2-8%, independent of sex. Given the lack of `predeformation' after nocturnal periods of unloading, morning postexercise deformation of the cartilage may have a greater magnitude than evening postexercise deformation. Copyright (C) 2012 S. Karger AG, Base
Ultrafast and reversible control of the exchange interaction in Mott insulators
The strongest interaction between microscopic spins in magnetic materials is
the exchange interaction . Therefore, ultrafast control of
holds the promise to control spins on ultimately fast timescales.
We demonstrate that time-periodic modulation of the electronic structure by
electric fields can be used to reversibly control on ultrafast
timescales in extended antiferromagnetic Mott insulators. In the regime of weak
driving strength, we find that can be enhanced and reduced for
frequencies below and above the Mott gap, respectively. Moreover, for strong
driving strength, even the sign of can be reversed and we show
that this causes time reversal of the associated quantum spin dynamics. These
results suggest wide applications, not only to control magnetism in condensed
matter systems, for example, via the excitation of spin resonances, but also to
assess fundamental questions concerning the reversibility of the quantum
many-body dynamics in cold atom systems.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Numerical residual perturbation solutions applied to the problem of a close satellite of the smaller body in the restricted three-body problem
Numerical residual perturbation solution for prediction of satellite position in restricted three-body proble
Optical control of competing exchange interactions and coherent spin-charge coupling in two-orbital Mott insulators
In order to have a better understanding of ultrafast electrical control of
exchange interactions in multi-orbital systems, we study a two-orbital Hubbard
model at half filling under the action of a time-periodic electric field. Using
suitable projection operators and a generalized time-dependent canonical
transformation, we derive an effective Hamiltonian which describes two
different regimes. First, for a wide range of non-resonant frequencies, we find
a change of the bilinear Heisenberg exchange that is
analogous to the single-orbital case. Moreover we demonstrate that also the
additional biquadratic exchange interaction can be enhanced,
reduced and even change sign depending on the electric field. Second, for
special driving frequencies, we demonstrate a novel spin-charge coupling
phenomenon enabling coherent transfer between spin and charge degrees of
freedom of doubly ionized states. These results are confirmed by an exact
time-evolution of the full two-orbital Mott-Hubbard Hamiltonian.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figure
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