232 research outputs found
Landau-Zener quantum tunneling in disordered nanomagnets
We study Landau-Zener macroscopic quantum transitions in ferromagnetic metal
nanoparticles containing on the order of 100 atoms. The model that we consider
is described by an effective giant-spin Hamiltonian, with a coupling to a
random transverse magnetic field mimicking the effect of quasiparticle
excitations and structural disorder on the gap structure of the spin collective
modes. We find different types of time evolutions depending on the interplay
between the disorder in the transverse field and the initial conditions of the
system. In the absence of disorder, if the system starts from a low-energy
state, there is one main coherent quantum tunneling event where the
initial-state amplitude is completely depleted in favor of a few discrete
states, with nearby spin quantum numbers; when starting from the highest
excited state, we observe complete inversion of the magnetization through a
peculiar ``backward cascade evolution''. In the random case, the
disorder-averaged transition probability for a low-energy initial state becomes
a smooth distribution, which is nevertheless still sharply peaked around one of
the transitions present in the disorder-free case. On the other hand, the
coherent backward cascade phenomenon turns into a damped cascade with
frustrated magnetic inversion.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Phys.Rev.
Electron-magnon coupling and nonlinear tunneling transport in magnetic nanoparticles
We present a theory of single-electron tunneling transport through a
ferromagnetic nanoparticle in which particle-hole excitations are coupled to
spin collective modes. The model employed to describe the interaction between
quasiparticles and collective excitations captures the salient features of a
recent microscopic study. Our analysis of nonlinear quantum transport in the
regime of weak coupling to the external electrodes is based on a rate-equation
formalism for the nonequilibrium occupation probability of the nanoparticle
many-body states. For strong electron-boson coupling, we find that the
tunneling conductance as a function of bias voltage is characterized by a large
and dense set of resonances. Their magnetic field dependence in the large-field
regime is linear, with slopes of the same sign. Both features are in agreement
with recent tunneling experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Theory of Tunneling Spectroscopy in a Mn Single-Electron Transistor by Density-Functional Theory Methods
We consider tunneling transport through a Mn molecular magnet using
spin density functional theory. A tractable methodology for constructing
many-body wavefunctions from Kohn-Sham orbitals allows for the determination of
spin-dependent matrix elements for use in transport calculations. The tunneling
conductance at finite bias is characterized by peaks representing transitions
between spin multiplets, separated by an energy on the order of the magnetic
anisotropy. The energy splitting of the spin multiplets and the spatial part of
their many-body wave functions, describing the orbital degrees of freedom of
the excess charge, strongly affect the electronic transport, and can lead to
negative differential conductance.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, a revised version with minor change
Mean Field Theory of Sandpile Avalanches: from the Intermittent to the Continuous Flow Regime
We model the dynamics of avalanches in granular assemblies in partly filled
rotating cylinders using a mean-field approach. We show that, upon varying the
cylinder angular velocity , the system undergoes a hysteresis cycle
between an intermittent and a continuous flow regimes. In the intermittent flow
regime, and approaching the transition, the avalanche duration exhibits
critical slowing down with a temporal power-law divergence. Upon adding a white
noise term, and close to the transition, the distribution of avalanche
durations is also a power-law. The hysteresis, as well as the statistics of
avalanche durations, are in good qualitative agreement with recent experiments
in partly filled rotating cylinders.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX 3.0, postscript figures 1, 3 and 4 appended
Energy level statistics of electrons in a 2D quasicrystal
A numerical study is made of the spectra of a tight-binding hamiltonian on
square approximants of the quasiperiodic octagonal tiling. Tilings may be pure
or random, with different degrees of phason disorder considered. The level
statistics for the randomized tilings follow the predictions of random matrix
theory, while for the perfect tilings a new type of level statistics is found.
In this case, the first-, second- level spacing distributions are well
described by lognormal laws with power law tails for large spacing. In
addition, level spacing properties being related to properties of the density
of states, the latter quantity is studied and the multifractal character of the
spectral measure is exhibited.Comment: 9 pages including references and figure captions, 6 figures available
upon request, LATEX, report-number els
Non-hermitean delocalization in an array of wells with variable-range widths
Nonhermitean hamiltonians of convection-diffusion type occur in the
description of vortex motion in the presence of a tilted magnetic field as well
as in models of driven population dynamics. We study such hamiltonians in the
case of rectangular barriers of variable size. We determine Lyapunov exponent
and wavenumber of the eigenfunctions within an adiabatic approach, allowing to
reduce the original d=2 phase space to a d=1 attractor. PACS
numbers:05.70.Ln,72.15Rn,74.60.GeComment: 20 pages,10 figure
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