30,105 research outputs found

    Perturbation Theory around Non-Nested Fermi Surfaces I. Keeping the Fermi Surface Fixed

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    The perturbation expansion for a general class of many-fermion systems with a non-nested, non-spherical Fermi surface is renormalized to all orders. In the limit as the infrared cutoff is removed, the counterterms converge to a finite limit which is differentiable in the band structure. The map from the renormalized to the bare band structure is shown to be locally injective. A new classification of graphs as overlapping or non-overlapping is given, and improved power counting bounds are derived from it. They imply that the only subgraphs that can generate rr factorials in the rthr^{\rm th} order of the renormalized perturbation series are indeed the ladder graphs and thus give a precise sense to the statement that `ladders are the most divergent diagrams'. Our results apply directly to the Hubbard model at any filling except for half-filling. The half-filled Hubbard model is treated in another place.Comment: plain TeX with postscript figures in a uuencoded gz-compressed tar file. Put it on a separate directory before unpacking, since it contains about 40 files. If you have problems, requests or comments, send e-mail to [email protected]

    Theoretical Expectations for Bulk Flows in Large Scale Surveys

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    We calculate the theoretical expectation for the bulk motion of a large scale survey of the type recently carried out by Lauer and Postman. Included are the effects of survey geometry, errors in the distance measurements, clustering properties of the sample, and different assumed power spectra. We consider the power spectrum calculated from the IRAS--QDOT survey, as well as spectra from hot ++ cold and standard cold dark matter models. We find that sparse sampling and clustering can lead to an unexpectedly large bulk flow, even in a very deep survey. Our results suggest that the expected bulk motion is inconsistent with that reported by Lauer and Postman at the 9094%90-94\% confidence level.Comment: 13 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript file with two figures and a table enclosed, UM-AC-93-2

    An Unbiased Estimator of Peculiar Velocity with Gaussian Distributed Errors for Precision Cosmology

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    We introduce a new estimator of the peculiar velocity of a galaxy or group of galaxies from redshift and distance estimates. This estimator results in peculiar velocity estimates which are statistically unbiased and that have errors that are Gaussian distributed, thus meeting the assumptions of analyses that rely on individual peculiar velocities. We apply this estimator to the SFI++ and the Cosmicflows-2 catalogs of galaxy distances and, using the fact that peculiar velocity estimates of distant galaxies are error dominated, examine their error distributions, The adoption of the new estimator significantly improves the accuracy and validity of studies of the large-scale peculiar velocity field and eliminates potential systematic biases, thus helping to bring peculiar velocity analysis into the era of precision cosmology. In addition, our method of examining the distribution of velocity errors should provide a useful check of the statistics of large peculiar velocity catalogs, particularly those that are compiled out of data from multiple sources.Comment: 6 Pages, 5 Figure

    General triple charged black ring solution in supergravity

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    We present the general black ring solution in U(1)3U(1)^{3} supergravity in 5 dimensions with three independent dipole and electric charges. This immediately gives the general black ring solution in the minimal 5D supergravity as well.Comment: 10 page

    The Cosmic Mach Number: Comparison from Observations, Numerical Simulations and Nonlinear Predictions

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    We calculate the cosmic Mach number M - the ratio of the bulk flow of the velocity field on scale R to the velocity dispersion within regions of scale R. M is effectively a measure of the ratio of large-scale to small-scale power and can be a useful tool to constrain the cosmological parameter space. Using a compilation of existing peculiar velocity surveys, we calculate M and compare it to that estimated from mock catalogues extracted from the LasDamas (a LCDM cosmology) numerical simulations. We find agreement with expectations for the LasDamas cosmology at ~ 1.5 sigma CL. We also show that our Mach estimates for the mocks are not biased by selection function effects. To achieve this, we extract dense and nearly-isotropic distributions using Gaussian selection functions with the same width as the characteristic depth of the real surveys, and show that the Mach numbers estimated from the mocks are very similar to the values based on Gaussian profiles of the corresponding widths. We discuss the importance of the survey window functions in estimating their effective depths. We investigate the nonlinear matter power spectrum interpolator PkANN as an alternative to numerical simulations, in the study of Mach number.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 3 table

    A Rigorous Proof of Fermi Liquid Behavior for Jellium Two-Dimensional Interacting Fermions

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    Using the method of continuous constructive renormalization group around the Fermi surface, it is proved that a jellium two-dimensional interacting system of Fermions at low temperature TT remains analytic in the coupling constant λ\lambda for λlogTK|\lambda| |\log T| \le K where KK is some numerical constant and TT is the temperature. Furthermore in that range of parameters, the first and second derivatives of the self-energy remain bounded, a behavior which is that of Fermi liquids and in particular excludes Luttinger liquid behavior. Our results prove also that in dimension two any transition temperature must be non-perturbative in the coupling constant, a result expected on physical grounds. The proof exploits the specific momentum conservation rules in two dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, no figure

    On the minimal number of matrices which form a locally hypercyclic, non-hypercyclic tuple

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    In this paper we extend the notion of a locally hypercyclic operator to that of a locally hypercyclic tuple of operators. We then show that the class of hypercyclic tuples of operators forms a proper subclass to that of locally hypercyclic tuples of operators. What is rather remarkable is that in every finite dimensional vector space over R\mathbb{R} or C\mathbb{C}, a pair of commuting matrices exists which forms a locally hypercyclic, non-hypercyclic tuple. This comes in direct contrast to the case of hypercyclic tuples where the minimal number of matrices required for hypercyclicity is related to the dimension of the vector space. In this direction we prove that the minimal number of diagonal matrices required to form a hypercyclic tuple on Rn\mathbb{R}^n is n+1n+1, thus complementing a recent result due to Feldman.Comment: 15 pages, title changed, section for infinite dimensional spaces adde

    Singular Fermi Surfaces II. The Two--Dimensional Case

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    We consider many--fermion systems with singular Fermi surfaces, which contain Van Hove points where the gradient of the band function ke(k)k \mapsto e(k) vanishes. In a previous paper, we have treated the case of spatial dimension d3d \ge 3. In this paper, we focus on the more singular case d=2d=2 and establish properties of the fermionic self--energy to all orders in perturbation theory. We show that there is an asymmetry between the spatial and frequency derivatives of the self--energy. The derivative with respect to the Matsubara frequency diverges at the Van Hove points, but, surprisingly, the self--energy is C1C^1 in the spatial momentum to all orders in perturbation theory, provided the Fermi surface is curved away from the Van Hove points. In a prototypical example, the second spatial derivative behaves similarly to the first frequency derivative. We discuss the physical significance of these findings.Comment: 68 pages LaTeX with figure
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