553 research outputs found
Phonon-mediated tuning of instabilities in the Hubbard model at half-filling
We obtain the phase diagram of the half-filled two-dimensional Hubbard model
on a square lattice in the presence of Einstein phonons. We find that the
interplay between the instantaneous electron-electron repulsion and
electron-phonon interaction leads to new phases. In particular, a
d-wave superconducting phase emerges when both anisotropic phonons
and repulsive Hubbard interaction are present. For large electron-phonon
couplings, charge-density-wave and s-wave superconducting regions also appear
in the phase diagram, and the widths of these regions are strongly dependent on
the phonon frequency, indicating that retardation effects play an important
role. Since at half-filling the Fermi surface is nested, spin-density-wave is
recovered when the repulsive interaction dominates. We employ a functional
multiscale renormalization-group method that includes both electron-electron
and electron-phonon interactions, and take retardation effects fully into
account.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Skyrmion Lattice in a Chiral Magnet
Skyrmions represent topologically stable field configurations with
particle-like properties. We used neutron scattering to observe the spontaneous
formation of a two-dimensional lattice of skyrmion lines, a type of magnetic
vortices, in the chiral itinerant-electron magnet MnSi. The skyrmion lattice
stabilizes at the border between paramagnetism and long-range helimagnetic
order perpendicular to a small applied magnetic field regardless of the
direction of the magnetic field relative to the atomic lattice. Our study
experimentally establishes magnetic materials lacking inversion symmetry as an
arena for new forms of crystalline order composed of topologically stable spin
states
Geometric aspects of nonholonomic field theories
A geometric model for nonholonomic Lagrangian field theory is studied. The
multisymplectic approach to such a theory as well as the corresponding Cauchy
formalism are discussed. It is shown that in both formulations, the relevant
equations for the constrained system can be recovered by a suitable projection
of the equations for the underlying free (i.e. unconstrained) Lagrangian
system.Comment: 29 pages; typos remove
Collective fields in the functional renormalization group for fermions, Ward identities, and the exact solution of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model
We develop a new formulation of the functional renormalization group (RG) for
interacting fermions. Our approach unifies the purely fermionic formulation
based on the Grassmannian functional integral, which has been used in recent
years by many authors, with the traditional Wilsonian RG approach to quantum
systems pioneered by Hertz [Phys. Rev. B 14, 1165 (1976)], which attempts to
describe the infrared behavior of the system in terms of an effective bosonic
theory associated with the soft modes of the underlying fermionic problem. In
our approach, we decouple the interaction by means of a suitable
Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation (following the Hertz-approach), but do not
eliminate the fermions; instead, we derive an exact hierarchy of RG flow
equations for the irreducible vertices of the resulting coupled field theory
involving both fermionic and bosonic fields. The freedom of choosing a momentum
transfer cutoff for the bosonic soft modes in addition to the usual band cutoff
for the fermions opens the possibility of new RG schemes. In particular, we
show how the exact solution of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model emerges from the
functional RG if one works with a momentum transfer cutoff. Then the Ward
identities associated with the local particle conservation at each Fermi point
are valid at every stage of the RG flow and provide a solution of an infinite
hierarchy of flow equations for the irreducible vertices. The RG flow equation
for the irreducible single-particle self-energy can then be closed and can be
reduced to a linear integro-differential equation, the solution of which yields
the result familiar from bosonization. We suggest new truncation schemes of the
exact hierarchy of flow equations, which might be useful even outside the weak
coupling regime.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures; published version, some typos correcte
Protective Immunity against Respiratory Syncytial Virus in Early Life after Murine Maternal or Neonatal Vaccination with the Recombinant G Fusion Protein BBG2Na
Maternal and neonatal immunization were evaluated for their capacity to induce protective immunity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory tract infections in early life. Murine models were studied by use of a novel recombinant vaccine candidate, designated BBG2Na, which was derived in part from the RSV (Long) G protein. Maternal immunization resulted in the passive transfer of high levels of RSV-A antibodies to the offspring, which protected them from RSV challenge for up to 14 weeks. Indeed, protection correlated with the detection of RSV antibodies in the serum. Neonatal immunization with BBG2Na induced significant antibody responses even in the first week of life. Most importantly, these neonatal responses were not inhibited by the presence of RSV maternal antibodies. Consequently, the combination of maternal and neonatal immunization with BBG2Na resulted in the continual presence of protective levels of antibodies in the offsprin
Symmetries in Classical Field Theory
The multisymplectic description of Classical Field Theories is revisited,
including its relation with the presymplectic formalism on the space of Cauchy
data. Both descriptions allow us to give a complete scheme of classification of
infinitesimal symmetries, and to obtain the corresponding conservation laws.Comment: 70S05; 70H33; 55R10; 58A2
Pre-multisymplectic constraint algorithm for field theories
We present a geometric algorithm for obtaining consistent solutions to
systems of partial differential equations, mainly arising from singular
covariant first-order classical field theories. This algorithm gives an
intrinsic description of all the constraint submanifolds.
The field equations are stated geometrically, either representing their
solutions by integrable connections or, what is equivalent, by certain kinds of
integrable m-vector fields. First, we consider the problem of finding
connections or multivector fields solutions to the field equations in a general
framework: a pre-multisymplectic fibre bundle (which will be identified with
the first-order jet bundle and the multimomentum bundle when Lagrangian and
Hamiltonian field theories are considered). Then, the problem is stated and
solved in a linear context, and a pointwise application of the results leads to
the algorithm for the general case. In a second step, the integrability of the
solutions is also studied.
Finally, the method is applied to Lagrangian and Hamiltonian field theories
and, for the former, the problem of finding holonomic solutions is also
analized.Comment: 30 pp. Presented in the International Workshop on Geometric Methods
in Modern Physics (Firenze, April 2005
Non-standard connections in classical mechanics
In the jet-bundle description of first-order classical field theories there
are some elements, such as the lagrangian energy and the construction of the
hamiltonian formalism, which require the prior choice of a connection. Bearing
these facts in mind, we analyze the situation in the jet-bundle description of
time-dependent classical mechanics. So we prove that this connection-dependence
also occurs in this case, although it is usually hidden by the use of the
``natural'' connection given by the trivial bundle structure of the phase
spaces in consideration. However, we also prove that this dependence is
dynamically irrelevant, except where the dynamical variation of the energy is
concerned. In addition, the relationship between first integrals and
connections is shown for a large enough class of lagrangians.Comment: 17 pages, Latex fil
Multivector Field Formulation of Hamiltonian Field Theories: Equations and Symmetries
We state the intrinsic form of the Hamiltonian equations of first-order
Classical Field theories in three equivalent geometrical ways: using
multivector fields, jet fields and connections. Thus, these equations are given
in a form similar to that in which the Hamiltonian equations of mechanics are
usually given. Then, using multivector fields, we study several aspects of
these equations, such as the existence and non-uniqueness of solutions, and the
integrability problem. In particular, these problems are analyzed for the case
of Hamiltonian systems defined in a submanifold of the multimomentum bundle.
Furthermore, the existence of first integrals of these Hamiltonian equations is
considered, and the relation between {\sl Cartan-Noether symmetries} and {\sl
general symmetries} of the system is discussed. Noether's theorem is also
stated in this context, both the ``classical'' version and its generalization
to include higher-order Cartan-Noether symmetries. Finally, the equivalence
between the Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalisms is also discussed.Comment: Some minor mistakes are corrected. Bibliography is updated. To be
published in J. Phys. A: Mathematical and Genera
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