1,599 research outputs found
Spontaneous superconductivity and optical properties of high-Tc cuprates
We suggest that the high temperature superconductivity in cuprate compounds
may emerge due to interaction between copper-oxygen layers mediated by in-plane
plasmons. The strength of the interaction is determined by the c-axis geometry
and by the ab-plane optical properties. Without making reference to any
particular in-plane mechanism of superconductivity, we show that the interlayer
interaction favors spontaneous appearance of the superconductivity in the
layers. At a qualitative level the model describes correctly the dependence of
the transition temperature on the interlayer distance, and on the number of
adjacent layers in multilayered homologous compounds. Moreover, the model has a
potential to explain (i) a mismatch between the optimal doping levels for
critical temperature and superconducting density and (ii) a universal scaling
relation between the dc-conductivity, the superfluid density, and the
superconducting transition temperature.Comment: 4.4 pages, 2 figures; v2 matches the published version (clarifying
remarks and references are added
Colossal magnetoresistance in an ultra-clean weakly interacting 2D Fermi liquid
We report the observation of a new phenomenon of colossal magnetoresistance
in a 40 nm wide GaAs quantum well in the presence of an external magnetic field
applied parallel to the high-mobility 2D electron layer. In a strong magnetic
field, the magnetoresistance is observed to increase by a factor of ~300 from 0
to 45T without the system undergoing any metal-insulator transition. We discuss
how this colossal magnetoresistance effect cannot be attributed to the spin
degree-of-freedom or localization physics, but most likely emanates from strong
magneto-orbital coupling between the two-dimensional electron gas and the
magnetic field. Our observation is consistent with a field-induced 2D-to-3D
transition in the confined electronic system
Subcritical Superstrings
We introduce the Liouville mode into the Green-Schwarz superstring. Like
massive supersymmetry without central charges, there is no kappa symmetry.
However, the second-class constraints (and corresponding Wess-Zumino term)
remain, and can be solved by (twisted) chiral superspace in dimensions D=4 and
6. The matter conformal anomaly is c = 4-D < 1. It thus can be canceled for
physical dimensions by the usual Liouville methods, unlike the bosonic string
(for which the consistency condition is c = D <= 1).Comment: 9 pg., compressed postscript file (.ps.Z), other formats (.dvi, .ps,
.ps.Z, 8-bit .tex) available at
http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/~siegel/preprints/ or at
ftp://max.physics.sunysb.edu/preprints/siege
Domain Walls in a FRW Universe
We solve the equations of motion for a scalar field with domain wall boundary
conditions in a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) spacetime. We find (in
agreement with Basu and Vilenkin) that no domain wall solutions exist in de
Sitter spacetime for h = H/m >= 1/2, where H is the Hubble parameter and m is
the scalar mass. In the general FRW case we develop a systematic perturbative
expansion in h to arrive at an approximate solution to the field equations. We
calculate the energy momentum tensor of the domain wall configuration, and show
that the energy density can become negative at the core of the defect for some
values of the non-minimal coupling parameter xi. We develop a translationally
invariant theory for fluctuations of the wall, obtain the effective Lagrangian
for these fluctuations, and quantize them using the Bunch-Davies vacuum in the
de Sitter case. Unlike previous analyses, we find that the fluctuations act as
zero-mass (as opposed to tachyonic) modes. This allows us to calculate the
distortion and the normal-normal correlators for the surface. The normal-normal
correlator decreases logarithmically with the distance between points for large
times and distances, indicating that the interface becomes rougher than in
Minkowski spacetime.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, 7 figures using epsf.tex. Now auto-generates P
Mechanical Flip-Chip for Ultra-High Electron Mobility Devices
Electrostatic gates are of paramount importance for the physics of devices
based on high-mobility two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) since they allow
depletion of electrons in selected areas. This field-effect gating enables the
fabrication of a wide range of devices such as, for example, quantum point
contacts (QPC), electron interferometers and quantum dots. To fabricate these
gates, processing is usually performed on the 2DEG material, which is in many
cases detrimental to its electron mobility. Here we propose an alternative
process which does not require any processing of the 2DEG material other than
for the ohmic contacts. This approach relies on processing a separate wafer
that is then mechanically mounted on the 2DEG material in a flip-chip fashion.
This technique proved successful to fabricate quantum point contacts on both
GaAs/AlGaAs materials with both moderate and ultra-high electron mobility.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The origins of religious disbelief: A dual inheritance approach
Widespread religious disbelief represents a key testing ground for theories of religion. We evaluated the predictions of three prominent theoretical approaches—secularization, cognitive byproduct, and dual inheritance—in a nationally representative (United States, N = 1,417) data set with preregistered analyses and found considerable support for the dual inheritance perspective. Of key predictors of religious disbelief, witnessing fewer credible cultural cues of religious commitment was the most potent, β = .28, followed distantly by reflective cognitive style, β = .13, and less advanced mentalizing, β = .05. Low cultural exposure predicted about 90% higher odds of atheism than did peak cognitive reflection, and cognitive reflection only predicted disbelief among those relatively low in cultural exposure to religion. This highlights the utility of considering both evolved intuitions and transmitted culture and emphasizes the dual roles of content- and context-biased social learning in the cultural transmission of disbelief.John Templeton Foundation; National Science Foundation
On anomalies in classical dynamical systems
The definition of "classical anomaly" is introduced. It describes the
situation in which a purely classical dynamical system which presents both a
lagrangian and a hamiltonian formulation admits symmetries of the action for
which the Noether conserved charges, endorsed with the Poisson bracket
structure, close an algebra which is just the centrally extended version of the
original symmetry algebra. The consistency conditions for this to occur are
derived. Explicit examples are given based on simple two-dimensional models.
Applications of the above scheme and lines of further investigations are
suggested.Comment: arXiv version is already officia
Integrable System Constructed out of Two Interacting Superconformal Fields
We describe how it is possible to introduce the interaction between
superconformal fields of the same conformal dimensions. In the classical case
such construction can be used to the construction of the Hirota - Satsuma
equation. We construct supersymmetric Poisson tensor for such fields, which
generates a new class of Hamiltonin systems. We found Lax representation for
one of equation in this class by supersymmetrization Lax operator responsible
for Hirota - Satsuma equation. Interestingly our supersymmetric equation is not
reducible to classical Hirota - Satsuma equation. We show that our generalized
system is reduced to the one of the supersymmetric KDV equation (a=4) but in
this limit integrals of motion are not reduced to integrals of motion of the
supersymmetric KdV equation.Comment: 15 pages,late
Free fields via canonical transformations of matter-coupled 2D dilaton gravity models
It is shown that the 1+1-dimensional matter-coupled Jackiw-Teitelboim model
and the model with an exponential potential can be converted by means of
appropriate canonical transformations into a bosonic string theory propagating
on a flat target space with an indefinite signature. This makes it possible to
consistently quantize these models in the functional Schroedinger
representation thus generalizing recent results on CGHS theory.Comment: 15 pages, Late
Specific Heat of Disordered Superfluid He
The specific heat of superfluid He, disordered by a silica aerogel, is
found to have a sharp discontinuity marking the thermodynamic transition to
superfluidity at a temperature reduced from that of bulk He. The
magnitude of the discontinuity is also suppressed. This disorder effect can be
understood from the Ginzburg-Landau theory which takes into account elastic
quasiparticle scattering suppressing both the transition temperature and the
amplitude of the order parameter. We infer that the limiting temperature
dependence of the specific heat is linear at low temperatures in the disordered
superfluid state, consistent with predictions of gapless excitations everywhere
on the Fermi surface.Comment: accpeted for publication in Physical Review Letter
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