177 research outputs found
Bandwidth-Controlled Insulator-Metal Transition and Correlated Metallic State in 5 Transition Metal Oxides SrIrO (=1, 2, and )
We investigated the electronic structures of the 5 Ruddlesden-Popper
series SrIrO (=1, 2, and ) using optical
spectroscopy and first-principles calculations. As 5 orbitals are spatially
more extended than 3 or 4 orbitals, it has been widely accepted that
correlation effects are minimal in 5 compounds. However, we observed a
bandwidth-controlled transition from a Mott insulator to a metal as we
increased . In addition, the artificially synthesized perovskite SrIrO
showed a very large mass enhancement of about 6, indicating that it was in a
correlated metallic state
Finite Temperature Renormalization of the - and -Models at Zero Momentum
A self-consistent renormalization scheme at finite temperature and zero
momentum is used together with the finite temperature renormalization group to
study the temperature dependence of the mass and the coupling to one-loop order
in the - and -models. It is found that the critical
temperature is shifted relative to the naive one-loop result and the coupling
constants at the critical temperature get large corrections. In the high
temperature limit of the \phiff-model the coupling decreases.Comment: 16 pages, plain Latex, NORDITA-92/38
Higgs coupling constants as a probe of new physics
We study new physics effects on the couplings of weak gauge bosons with the
lightest CP-even Higgs boson (), , and the tri-linear coupling of the
lightest Higgs boson, , at the one loop order, as predicted by the two
Higgs doublet model. Those renormalized coupling constants can deviate from the
Standard Model (SM) predictions due to two distinct origins; the tree level
mixing effect of Higgs bosons and the quantum effect of additional particles in
loop diagrams. The latter can be enhanced in the renormalized coupling
constant when the additional particles show the non-decoupling property.
Therefore, even in the case where the coupling is close to the SM value,
deviation in the coupling from the SM value can become as large as plus
100 percent, while that in the coupling is at most minus 1 percent level.
Such large quantum effect on the Higgs tri-linear coupling is distinguishable
from the tree level mixing effect, and is expected to be detectable at a future
linear collider.Comment: 52 pages, 10 figures, revtex
Perturbative analysis for Kaplan's lattice chiral fermions
Perturbation theory for lattice fermions with domain wall mass terms is
developed and is applied to investigate the chiral Schwinger model formulated
on the lattice by Kaplan's method. We calculate the effective action for gauge
fields to one loop, and find that it contains a longitudinal component even for
anomaly-free cases. From the effective action we obtain gauge anomalies and
Chern-Simons current without ambiguity. We also show that the current
corresponding to the fermion number has a non-zero divergence and it flows off
the wall into the extra dimension. Similar results are obtained for a proposal
by Shamir, who used a constant mass term with free boundaries instead of domain
walls.Comment: 25 page, 5 PostScript figures, [some changes in the conclusion
Ferroelectric property of an epitaxial lead zirconate titanate thin film deposited by a hydrothermal method
Deposition of thin films via hydrothermal method has various advantages: low deposition temperature, high purity, deposition on a three-dimensional structure, and a large thickness. Although an epitaxial lead zirconate titanate (PZT) thin-film deposition has been reported, the ferroelectric measurement has not been conducted due to the peel-off morphology of the film. The current paper investigates the improvement of an epitaxial PZT thin film deposited via a hydrothermal method. By adjusting the position at which the substrate was suspended in the solution, smooth morphology surface was successfully obtained. As a bottom electrode, a 200-nm SrRuO3 thin film was deposited on SrTiO3 single crystals, and the PZT thin film was deposited on SrRuO3. The remanent polarization 2Pr and coercive electric field for PZT on SrRuO3/SrTiO3 (001) were 17.1 muC/cm(2) and 36 kV/cm, respectively, and those of PZT on SrRuO3/SrTiO3 (111) were 32.7 muC/cm(2) and 59 kV/cm, respectively. The reason for large imprint electrical field, 91 kV/cm and 40 kV/cm for each film, was unclear at this stage, although it is associated with self-alignment poling direction. This self-alignment poling direction was confirmed via scanning nonlinear dielectric microscopy and is thought to have been related to the deposition mechanisms
One-Loop Renormalization of a Self-Interacting Scalar Field in Nonsimply Connected Spacetimes
Using the effective potential, we study the one-loop renormalization of a
massive self-interacting scalar field at finite temperature in flat manifolds
with one or more compactified spatial dimensions. We prove that, owing to the
compactification and finite temperature, the renormalized physical parameters
of the theory (mass and coupling constant) acquire thermal and topological
contributions. In the case of one compactified spatial dimension at finite
temperature, we find that the corrections to the mass are positive, but those
to the coupling constant are negative. We discuss the possibility of
triviality, i.e. that the renormalized coupling constant goes to zero at some
temperature or at some radius of the compactified spatial dimension.Comment: 16 pages, plain LATE
Kaplan-Narayanan-Neuberger lattice fermions pass a perturbative test
We test perturbatively a recent scheme for implementing chiral fermions on
the lattice, proposed by Kaplan and modified by Narayanan and Neuberger, using
as our testing ground the chiral Schwinger model. The scheme is found to
reproduce the desired form of the effective action, whose real part is gauge
invariant and whose imaginary part gives the correct anomaly in the continuum
limit, once technical problems relating to the necessary infinite extent of the
extra dimension are properly addressed. The indications from this study are
that the Kaplan--Narayanan--Neuberger (KNN) scheme has a good chance at being a
correct lattice regularization of chiral gauge theories.Comment: LaTeX 18 pages, 3 figure
Inflationary Baryogenesis
In this letter we explore the possibility of creating the baryon asymmetry of
the universe during inflation and reheating due to the decay of a field
associated with the inflaton. CP violation is attained by assuming that this
field is complex with a phase that varies as the inflaton evolves. We consider
chaotic and natural inflation scenarios. In the former case, the complex
decaying field is the inflaton itself and, in the latter case, the phase of the
complex field is the inflaton. We calculate the asymmetry produced using the
Bogolyubov formalism that relates annihilation and creation operators at late
time to the annihilation and creation operators at early time.Comment: 17 pages, Revte
Sphalerons and the Electroweak Phase Transition in Models with Higher Scalar Representations
In this work we investigate the sphaleron solution in a
gauge theory, which also encompasses the Standard Model, with higher scalar
representation(s) (). We show that the field profiles
describing the sphaleron in higher scalar multiplet, have similar trends like
the doublet case with respect to the radial distance. We compute the sphaleron
energy and find that it scales linearly with the vacuum expectation value of
the scalar field and its slope depends on the representation. We also
investigate the effect of gauge field and find that it is small for the
physical value of the mixing angle, and resembles the case for the
doublet. For higher representations, we show that the criterion for strong
first order phase transition, , is relaxed with respect to
the doublet case, i.e. .Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures & 1 table, published versio
Chiral Fermions on the Lattice through Gauge Fixing -- Perturbation Theory
We study the gauge-fixing approach to the construction of lattice chiral
gauge theories in one-loop weak-coupling perturbation theory. We show how
infrared properties of the gauge degrees of freedom determine the nature of the
continuous phase transition at which we take the continuum limit. The fermion
self-energy and the vacuum polarization are calculated, and confirm that, in
the abelian case, this approach can be used to put chiral gauge theories on the
lattice in four dimensions. We comment on the generalization to the nonabelian
case.Comment: 31 pages, 5 figures, two refs. adde
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