52 research outputs found
Magnetoelastic nature of solid oxygen epsilon-phase structure
For a long time a crystal structure of high-pressure epsilon-phase of solid
oxygen was a mistery. Basing on the results of recent experiments that have
solved this riddle we show that the magnetic and crystal structure of
epsilon-phase can be explained by strong exchange interactions of
antiferromagnetic nature. The singlet state implemented on quaters of O2
molecules has the minimal exchange energy if compared to other possible singlet
states (dimers, trimers). Magnetoelastic forces that arise from the spatial
dependence of the exchange integral give rise to transformation of 4(O2)
rhombuses into the almost regular quadrates. Antiferromagnetic character of the
exchange interactions stabilizes distortion of crystal lattice in epsilon-phase
and impedes such a distortion in long-range alpha- and delta-phases.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, Changes: corrected typos, reference to the
recent paper is adde
Effects of finite curvature on soliton dynamics in a chain of nonlinear oscillators
We consider a curved chain of nonlinear oscillators and show that the
interplay of curvature and nonlinearity leads to a number of qualitative
effects. In particular, the energy of nonlinear localized excitations centered
on the bending decreases when curvature increases, i.e. bending manifests
itself as a trap for excitations. Moreover, the potential of this trap is
double-well, thus leading to a symmetry breaking phenomenon: a symmetric
stationary state may become unstable and transform into an energetically
favorable asymmetric stationary state. The essentials of symmetry breaking are
examined analytically for a simplified model. We also demonstrate a threshold
character of the scattering process, i.e. transmission, trapping, or reflection
of the moving nonlinear excitation passing through the bending.Comment: 13 pages (LaTeX) with 10 figures (EPS
Magnetic structures of -O resulting from competition of interplane exchange interactions
Solid oxygen is a unique molecular crystal whose phase diagram is mostly
imposed by magnetic ordering, i.e., each crystal phase has a specific magnetic
structure. However, recent experiments showed that high-pressure -phase
is implemented in different magnetic structures. In the present paper we study
the role of interplane exchange interactions in formation of the magnetic
structures with different stacking sequences of the close-packed planes. We
show that temperature-induced variation of intermolecular distances can give
rise to compensation of the exchange coupling between the nearest close-packed
planes and result in the phase transition between different magnetic structures
within -O. Variation of the magnetic ordering is, in turn,
accompanied by the step-wise variation of interplane distance governed by space
and angular dependence of interplane exchange constants.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Solitons in anharmonic chains with ultra-long-range interatomic interactions
We study the influence of long-range interatomic interactions on the
properties of supersonic pulse solitons in anharmonic chains. We show that in
the case of ultra-long-range (e.g., screened Coulomb) interactions three
different types of pulse solitons coexist in a certain velocity interval: one
type is unstable but the two others are stable. The high-energy stable soliton
is broad and can be described in the quasicontinuum approximation. But the
low-energy stable soliton consists of two components, short-range and
long-range ones, and can be considered as a bound state of these components.Comment: 4 pages (LaTeX), 5 figures (Postscript); submitted to Phys. Rev.
Kinks in the discrete sine-Gordon model with Kac-Baker long-range interactions
We study effects of Kac-Baker long-range dispersive interaction (LRI) between
particles on kink properties in the discrete sine-Gordon model. We show that
the kink width increases indefinitely as the range of LRI grows only in the
case of strong interparticle coupling. On the contrary, the kink becomes
intrinsically localized if the coupling is under some critical value.
Correspondingly, the Peierls-Nabarro barrier vanishes as the range of LRI
increases for supercritical values of the coupling but remains finite for
subcritical values. We demonstrate that LRI essentially transforms the internal
dynamics of the kinks, specifically creating their internal localized and
quasilocalized modes. We also show that moving kinks radiate plane waves due to
break of the Lorentz invariance by LRI.Comment: 11 pages (LaTeX) and 14 figures (Postscript); submitted to Phys. Rev.
Stationary and moving breathers in a simplified model of curved alpha--helix proteins
The existence, stability and movability of breathers in a model for
alpha-helix proteins is studied. This model basically consists a chain of
dipole moments parallel to it. The existence of localized linear modes brings
about that the system has a characteristic frequency, which depends on the
curvature of the chain. Hard breathers are stable, while soft ones experiment
subharmonic instabilities that preserve, however the localization. Moving
breathers can travel across the bending point for small curvature and are
reflected when it is increased. No trapping of breathers takes place.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Localization of nonlinear excitations in curved waveguides
Motivated by the example of a curved waveguide embedded in a photonic
crystal, we examine the effects of geometry in a ``quantum channel'' of
parabolic form. We study the linear case and derive exact as well as
approximate expressions for the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the linear
problem. We then proceed to the nonlinear setting and its stationary states in
a number of limiting cases that allow for analytical treatment. The results of
our analysis are used as initial conditions in direct numerical simulations of
the nonlinear problem and localized excitations are found to persist, as well
as to have interesting relaxational dynamics. Analogies of the present problem
in contexts related to atomic physics and particularly to Bose-Einstein
condensation are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
On the theory of pseudogap anisotropy in the cuprate superconductors
We show by means of the theory of the order parameter phase fluctuations that
the temperature of "closing" (or "opening") of the gap (and pseudogap) in the
electron spectra of superconductors with anisotropic order parameter takes
place within a finite temperature range. Every Fourier-component of the order
parameter has its own critical temperature
Vortex Polarity Switching in Magnets with Surface Anisotropy
Vortex core reversal in magnetic particle is essentially influenced by a
surface anisotropy. Under the action of a perpendicular static magnetic field
the vortex core undergoes a shape deformationof pillow- or barrel-shaped type,
depending on the type of the surface anisotropy. This deformation plays a key
point in the switching mechanism: We predict that the vortex polarity switching
is accompanied (i) by a linear singularity in case of Heisenberg magnet with
bulk anisotropy only and (ii) by a point singularities in case of surface
anisotropy or exchange anisotropy. We study in details the switching process
using spin-lattice simulations and propose a simple analytical description
using a wired core model, which provides an adequate description of the Bloch
point statics, its dynamics and the Bloch point mediated switching process. Our
analytical predictions are confirmed by spin-lattice simulations for Heisenberg
magnet and micromagnetic simulations for nanomagnet with account of a dipolar
interaction.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figure
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