576 research outputs found
Threshold Singularities in the One Dimensional Hubbard Model
We consider excitations with the quantum numbers of a hole in the one
dimensional Hubbard model below half-filling. We calculate the finite-size
corrections to the energy. The results are then used to determine threshold
singularities in the single-particle Green's function for commensurate
fillings. We present the analogous results for the Yang-Gaudin model (electron
gas with delta-function interactions).Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures version to appear in Phys Rev
Determinant formula for the six-vertex model with reflecting end
Using the Quantum Inverse Scattering Method for the XXZ model with open
boundary conditions, we obtained the determinant formula for the six vertex
model with reflecting end.Comment: 10 page
Relationship between single-particle excitation and spin excitation at the Mott Transition
An intuitive interpretation of the relationship between the dispersion
relation of the single-particle excitation in a metal and that of the spin
excitation in a Mott insulator is presented, based on the results for the one-
and two-dimensional Hubbard models obtained by using the Bethe ansatz,
dynamical density-matrix renormalization group method, and cluster perturbation
theory. The dispersion relation of the spin excitation in the Mott insulator is
naturally constructed from that of the single-particle excitation in the
zero-doping limit in both one- and two-dimensional Hubbard models, which allows
us to interpret the doping-induced states as the states that lose charge
character toward the Mott transition. The characteristic feature of the Mott
transition is contrasted with the feature of a Fermi liquid and that of the
transition between a band insulator and a metal.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in JPS Conf. Pro
Dynamical Spin Response of Doped Two-Leg Hubbard-like Ladders
We study the dynamical spin response of doped two-leg Hubbard-like ladders in
the framework of a low-energy effective field theory description given by the
SO(6) Gross Neveu model. Using the integrability of the SO(6) Gross-Neveu
model, we derive the low energy dynamical magnetic susceptibility. The
susceptibility is characterized by an incommensurate coherent mode near
and by broad two excitation scattering continua at other
-points. In our computation we are able to estimate the relative weights of
these contributions.
All calculations are performed using form-factor expansions which yield exact
low energy results in the context of the SO(6) Gross-Neveu model. To employ
this expansion, a number of hitherto undetermined form factors were computed.
To do so, we developed a general approach for the computation of matrix
elements of semi-local SO(6) Gross-Neveu operators. While our computation takes
place in the context of SO(6) Gross-Neveu, we also consider the effects of
perturbations away from an SO(6) symmetric model, showing that small
perturbations at best quantitatively change the physics.Comment: 32 pages and 7 figure
Quantum phase transition in the one-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model
We consider the one-dimensional extended Hubbard model in the presence of an
explicit dimerization . For a sufficiently strong nearest neighbour
repulsion we establish the existence of a quantum phase transition between a
mixed bond-order wave and charge-density wave phase from a pure bond-order wave
phase. This phase transition is in the universality class of the
two-dimensional Ising model.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Thermodynamics of the one-dimensional half-filled Hubbard model in the spin-disordered regime
We analyze the Thermodynamic Bethe Ansatz equations of the one-dimensional
half-filled Hubbard model in the "spin-disordered regime", which is
characterized by the temperature being much larger than the magnetic energy
scale but small compared to the Mott-Hubbard gap. In this regime the
thermodynamics of the Hubbard model can be thought of in terms of gapped
charged excitations with an effective dispersion and spin degrees of freedom
that only contribute entropically. In particular, the internal energy and the
effective dispersion become essentially independent of temperature. An
interpretation of this regime in terms of a putative interacting-electron
system at zero temperature leads to a metal-insulator transition at a finite
interaction strength above which the gap opens linearly. We relate these
observations to studies of the Mott-Hubbard transition in the limit of infinite
dimensions.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical response functions in the quantum Ising chain with a boundary
We determine dynamical response functions in the scaling limit of the quantum Ising chain on the half line in
the presence of a boundary magnetic field. Using a spectral representation in
terms of infinite volume form factors and a boundary state, we derive an
expansion for the correlator that is found to be rapidly convergent as long as
|\frac{x_1+x_2}{\xi}|\agt 0.2 where is the correlation length. At
sufficiently late times we observe oscillatory behaviour of the correlations
arbitrarily far away from the boundary. We investigate the effects of the
boundary bound state that is present for a range of boundary magnetic fields.Comment: 32 page
Effects of thermal phase fluctuations in a 2D superconductor: an exact result for the spectral function
We consider the single particle spectral function for a two-dimensional clean
superconductor in a regime of strong critical thermal phase fluctuations. In
the limit where the maximum of the superconducting gap is much smaller than the
Fermi energy we obtain an exact expression for the spectral function integrated
over the momentum component perpendicular to the Fermi surface.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. References added, figures improve
Optical conductivity of one-dimensional narrow-gap semiconductors
The optical conductivities of two one-dimensional narrow-gap semiconductors,
anticrossing quantum Hall edge states and carbon nanotubes, are studied using
bosonization method. A lowest order renormalization group analysis indicates
that the bare band gap can be treated perturbatively at high
frequency/temperature. At very low energy scale the optical conductivity is
dominated by the excitonic contribution, while at temperature higher than a
crossover temperature the excitonic features are eliminated by thermal
fluctuations. In case of carbon nanotubes the crossover temperature scale is
estimated to be 300 K.Comment: RevTeX4 file, 6 pages, no figur
Exactly Solvable Models of Strongly Correlated Electrons
This is a reprint volume devoted to exact solutions of models of strongly
correlated electrons in one spatial dimension by means of the Bethe Ansatz.Comment: Editors 490 pages, World Scientific, 1994, ISBN 981-02-1534-
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