1,965 research outputs found
Resonant pairing isotope effect in polaronic systems
The intermediate coupling regime in polaronic systems, situated between the
adiabatic and the anti-adiabatic limit, is characterized by resonant pairing
between quasi-free electrons which is induced by an exchange interaction with
localized bipolarons. The onset of this resonant pairing takes place below a
characteristic temperature T* and is manifest in the opening of a pseudogap in
the density of states of the electrons. The variation of T* is examined here as
a function of (i) the typical frequency \omega_0 of the local lattice modes,
which determines the binding energy of the bipolarons, and (ii) the doping,
which amounts to a relative change of the bipolaron concentration n_B to that
of the free electrons n_F. We concentrate on a doping regime, where small
changes in doping give rise to a large change in T*, which is the case when n_B
is small (< 0.1 per site). For finite values of n_B we find negative and
practically doping independent values of the isotope coefficient \alpha^* which
characterizes the formation of resonating electron pairs. Upon decreasing the
total particle density such that n_B becomes exponentially small, we find a
rapid change in sign of \alpha^*. This is related to the fact that the system
approaches a state which is more BCS-like, where electron pairing occurs via
virtual excitations into bipolaronic states and where T* coincides with the
onset of superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, enlarged discussion on the limits of validity of
the model, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Defect propagation in one-, two-, and three-dimensional compounds doped by magnetic atoms
Inelastic neutron scattering experiments were performed to study
manganese(II) dimer excitations in the diluted one-, two-, and
three-dimensional compounds CsMn(x)Mg(1-x)Br(3), K(2)Mn(x)Zn(1-x)F(4), and
KMn(x)Zn(1-x)F(3) (x<0.10), respectively. The transitions from the ground-state
singlet to the excited triplet, split into a doublet and a singlet due to the
single-ion anisotropy, exhibit remarkable fine structures. These unusual
features are attributed to local structural inhomogeneities induced by the
dopant Mn atoms which act like lattice defects. Statistical models support the
theoretically predicted decay of atomic displacements according to 1/r**2, 1/r,
and constant (for three-, two-, and one-dimensional compounds, respectively)
where r denotes the distance of the displaced atoms from the defect. The
observed fine structures allow a direct determination of the local exchange
interactions J, and the local intradimer distances R can be derived through the
linear law dJ/dR.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Extremal Quantum Correlations and Cryptographic Security
We investigate a fundamental property of device independent security in
quantum cryptography by characterizing probability distributions which are
necessarily independent of the measurement results of any eavesdropper. We show
that probability distributions that are secure in this sense are exactly the
extremal quantum probability distributions. This allows us to give a
characterization of security in algebraic terms. We apply the method to common
examples for two-party as well as multi-party setups and present a scheme for
verifying security of probability distributions with two parties, two
measurement settings, and two outcomes.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, revised version, accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev. Let
Magnetic excitations in the spin-trimer compounds Ca3Cu3-xNix(PO4)4 (x=0,1,2)
Inelastic neutron scattering experiments were performed for the spin-trimer
compounds Ca3Cu3-xNix(PO4)4 (x=0,1,2) in order to study the dynamic magnetic
properties. The observed excitations can be associated with transitions between
the low-lying electronic states of linear Cu-Cu-Cu, Cu-Cu-Ni, and Ni-Cu-Ni
trimers which are the basic constituents of the title compounds. The exchange
interactions within the trimers are well described by the Heisenberg model with
dominant antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor interactions J. For x=0 we find
JCu-Cu=-4.74(2) meV which is enhanced for x=1 to JCu-Cu=-4.92(6) meV. For x=1
and x=2 we find JCu-Ni=-0.85(10) meV and an axial single-ion anisotropy
parameter DNi=-0.7(1) meV. While the x=0 and x=1 compounds do not exhibit
long-range magnetic ordering down to 1 K, the x=2 compound shows
antiferromagnetic ordering below TN=20 K, which is compatible with the
molecular-field parameter 0.63(12) meV derived by neutron spectroscopy.Comment: 22 pages (double spacing), 1 table, 9 figures, Submitted to Phys.
Rev. B (2007
Isotope effect on superconductivity in Josephson coupled stripes in underdoped cuprates
Inelastic neutron scattering data for YBaCuO as well as for LaSrCuO indicate
incommensurate neutron scattering peaks with incommensuration away
from the point. can be replotted as a linear function of
the incommensuration for these materials. This linear relation implies that the
constant that relates these two quantities, one being the incommensuration
(momentum) and another being (energy), has the dimension of velocity
we denote : . We argue that this
experimentally derived relation can be obtained in a simple model of Josephson
coupled stripes. Within this framework we address the role of the isotope effect on the . We assume that the incommensuration is
set by the {\em doping} of the sample and is not sensitive to the oxygen
isotope given the fixed doping. We find therefore that the only parameter that
can change with O isotope substitution in the relation
is the velocity . We predict an oxygen isotope effect on and expect
it to be .Comment: 4 pages latex file, 2 eps fig
Evidence for complex order parameter in La_{1.83}Sr_{0.17}CuO_4
The in-plane magnetic field penetration depth (\lambda_{ab}) in
single-crystal La_{1.83}Sr_{0.17}CuO_4 was investigated by means of the
muon-spin rotation (\muSR) technique. The temperature dependence of
\lambda^{-2}_{ab} has an inflection point around 10-15K, suggesting the
presence of two superconducting gaps: a large gap (\Delta_1^d) with d-wave and
a small gap (\Delta_2^s) with s-wave symmetry. The zero-temperature values of
the gaps at \mu_0H=0.02T were found to be \Delta_1^d(0)=8.2(2)meV and
\Delta_2^s(0)=1.57(8)meV.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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