923 research outputs found

    Ising transition in the two-dimensional quantum J1J2J_1-J_2 Heisenberg model

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    We study the thermodynamics of the spin-SS two-dimensional quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the square lattice with nearest (J1J_1) and next-nearest (J2J_2) neighbor couplings in its collinear phase (J2/J1>0.5J_2/J_1>0.5), using the pure-quantum self-consistent harmonic approximation. Our results show the persistence of a finite-temperature Ising phase transition for every value of the spin, provided that the ratio J2/J1J_2/J_1 is greater than a critical value corresponding to the onset of collinear long-range order at zero temperature. We also calculate the spin- and temperature-dependence of the collinear susceptibility and correlation length, and we discuss our results in light of the experiments on Li2_2VOSiO4_4 and related compounds.Comment: 4 page, 4 figure

    Semileptonic Hyperon Decays

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    We review the status of hyperon semileptonic decays. The central issue is the VusV_{us} element of the CKM matrix, where we obtain Vus=0.2250(27)V_{us}=0.2250 (27). This value is of similar precision, but higher, than the one derived from Kl3K_{l3}, and in better agreement with the unitarity requirement, Vud2+Vus2+Vub2=1|V_{ud}|^2+|V_{us}|^2+|V_{ub}|^2=1. We find that the Cabibbo model gives an excellent fit of the existing form factor data on baryon beta decays (χ2=2.96\chi^{2} = 2.96 for 3 degrees of freedom) with F+D=1.2670±0.0030F + D = 1.2670 \pm 0.0030, FD=0.341±0.016F - D = -0.341 \pm 0.016, and no indication of flavour-SU(3)-breaking effects. We indicate the need of more experimental and theoretical work, both on hyperon beta decays and on Kl3K_{l3} decays.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, Final version of this material is scheduled to appear in the Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science Vol. 5

    Affine Lie Algebras in Massive Field Theory and Form-Factors from Vertex Operators

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    We present a new application of affine Lie algebras to massive quantum field theory in 2 dimensions, by investigating the q1q\to 1 limit of the q-deformed affine sl(2)^\hat{sl(2)} symmetry of the sine-Gordon theory, this limit occurring at the free fermion point. Working in radial quantization leads to a quasi-chiral factorization of the space of fields. The conserved charges which generate the affine Lie algebra split into two independent affine algebras on this factorized space, each with level 1 in the anti-periodic sector, and level 00 in the periodic sector. The space of fields in the anti-periodic sector can be organized using level-11 highest weight representations, if one supplements the \slh algebra with the usual local integrals of motion. Introducing a particle-field duality leads to a new way of computing form-factors in radial quantization. Using the integrals of motion, a momentum space bosonization involving vertex operators is formulated. Form-factors are computed as vacuum expectation values in momentum space. (Based on talks given at the Berkeley Strings 93 conference, May 1993, and the III International Conference on Mathematical Physics, String Theory, and Quantum Gravity, Alushta, Ukraine, June 1993.)Comment: 13 pages, CLNS 93/125

    Two-spin entanglement distribution near factorized states

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    We study the two-spin entanglement distribution along the infinite S=1/2S=1/2 chain described by the XY model in a transverse field; closed analytical expressions are derived for the one-tangle and the concurrences CrC_r, rr being the distance between the two possibly entangled spins, for values of the Hamiltonian parameters close to those corresponding to factorized ground states. The total amount of entanglement, the fraction of such entanglement which is stored in pairwise entanglement, and the way such fraction distributes along the chain is discussed, with attention focused on the dependence on the anisotropy of the exchange interaction. Near factorization a characteristic length-scale naturally emerges in the system, which is specifically related with entanglement properties and diverges at the critical point of the fully isotropic model. In general, we find that anisotropy rule a complex behavior of the entanglement properties, which results in the fact that more isotropic models, despite being characterized by a larger amount of total entanglement, present a smaller fraction of pairwise entanglement: the latter, in turn, is more evenly distributed along the chain, to the extent that, in the fully isotropic model at the critical field, the concurrences do not depend on rr.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Final versio

    Adiabatic multicritical quantum quenches: Continuously varying exponents depending on the direction of quenching

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    We study adiabatic quantum quenches across a quantum multicritical point (MCP) using a quenching scheme that enables the system to hit the MCP along different paths. We show that the power-law scaling of the defect density with the rate of driving depends non-trivially on the path, i.e., the exponent varies continuously with the parameter α\alpha that defines the path, up to a critical value α=αc\alpha= \alpha_c; on the other hand for ααc\alpha \geq \alpha_c, the scaling exponent saturates to a constant value. We show that dynamically generated and {\it path(α\alpha)-dependent} effective critical exponents associated with the quasicritical points lying close to the MCP (on the ferromagnetic side), where the energy-gap is minimum, lead to this continuously varying exponent. The scaling relations are established using the integrable transverse XY spin chain and generalized to a MCP associated with a dd-dimensional quantum many-body systems (not reducible to two-level systems) using adiabatic perturbation theory. We also calculate the effective {\it path-dependent} dimensional shift d0(α)d_0(\alpha) (or the shift in center of the impulse region) that appears in the scaling relation for special paths lying entirely in the paramagnetic phase. Numerically obtained results are in good agreement with analytical predictions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Quantization in a General Light-front Frame

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    In this paper, we study the question of quantization of quantum field theories in a general light-front frame. We quantize scalar, fermion as well as gauge field theories in a systematic manner carrying out the Hamiltonian analysis carefully. The decomposition of the fields into positive and negative frequency terms needs to be done carefully after which we show that the (anti) commutation relations for the quantum operators become frame independent. The frame dependence is completely contained in the functions multiplying these operators in the field decomposition. We derive the propagators from the vacuum expectation values of the time ordered products of the fields.Comment: 14 pages, revtex, version to be published in Phys. Rev. D with the discussion of Abelian field quantization replaced by the non-Abelian field and some comments added on the Mandelstam-Liebbrandt prescriptio

    Relation between concurrence and Berry phase of an entangled state of two spin 1/2 particles

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    We have studied here the influence of the Berry phase generated due to a cyclic evolution of an entangled state of two spin 1/2 particles. It is shown that the measure of formation of entanglement is related to the cyclic geometric phase of the individual spins. \\Comment: 6 pages. Accepted in Europhys. Letters (likely to be published in vol 73, pp1-6 (2006)

    Dynamics of an inhomogeneous quantum phase transition

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    We argue that in a second order quantum phase transition driven by an inhomogeneous quench density of quasiparticle excitations is suppressed when velocity at which a critical point propagates across a system falls below a threshold velocity equal to the Kibble-Zurek correlation length times the energy gap at freeze-out divided by \hbar. This general prediction is supported by an analytic solution in the quantum Ising chain. Our results suggest, in particular, that adiabatic quantum computers can be made more adiabatic when operated in an "inhomogeneous" way.Comment: 7 pages; version to appear in a special issue of New J. Phy

    Quantum fluctuations in one-dimensional arrays of condensates

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    The effects of quantum and thermal fluctuations upon the fringe structure predicted to be observable in the momentum distribution of coupled Bose-Einstein condensates are studied by the effective-potential method. For a double-well trap, the coherence factor recently introduced by Pitaevskii and Stringari [Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 180402 (2001)] is calculated using the effective potential approach and is found in good agreement with their result. The calculations are extended to the case of a one-dimensional array of condensates, showing that quantum effects are essentially described through a simple renormalization of the energy scale in the classical analytical expression for the fringe structure. The consequences for the experimental observability are discussed.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 5 eps figures (published version with updated references
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