37 research outputs found
Statistical mechanics of permanent random atomic and molecular networks: Structure and heterogeneity of the amorphous solid state
Under sufficient permanent random covalent bonding, a fluid of atoms or small
molecules is transformed into an amorphous solid network. Being amorphous,
local structural properties in such networks vary across the sample. A natural
order parameter, resulting from a statistical-mechanical approach, captures
information concerning this heterogeneity via a certain joint probability
distribution. This joint probability distribution describes the variations in
the positional and orientational localization of the particles, reflecting the
random environments experienced by them, as well as further information
characterizing the thermal motion of particles. A complete solution, valid in
the vicinity of the amorphous solidification transition, is constructed
essentially analytically for the amorphous solid order parameter, in the
context of the random network model and approach introduced by Goldbart and
Zippelius [Europhys. Lett. 27, 599 (1994)]. Knowledge of this order parameter
allows us to draw certain conclusions about the stucture and heterogeneity of
randomly covalently bonded atomic or molecular network solids in the vicinity
of the amorphous solidification transition. Inter alia, the positional aspects
of particle localization are established to have precisely the structure
obtained perviously in the context of vulcanized media, and results are found
for the analogue of the spin glass order parameter describing the orientational
freezing of the bonds between particles.Comment: 31 pages, 5 figure
Universality and its Origins at the Amorphous Solidification Transition
Systems undergoing an equilibrium phase transition from a liquid state to an
amorphous solid state exhibit certain universal characteristics. Chief among
these are the fraction of particles that are randomly localized and the scaling
functions that describe the order parameter and (equivalently) the statistical
distribution of localization lengths for these localized particles. The purpose
of this Paper is to discuss the origins and consequences of this universality,
and in doing so, three themes are explored. First, a replica-Landau-type
approach is formulated for the universality class of systems that are composed
of extended objects connected by permanent random constraints and undergo
amorphous solidification at a critical density of constraints. This formulation
generalizes the cases of randomly cross-linked and end-linked macromolecular
systems, discussed previously. The universal replica free energy is
constructed, in terms of the replica order parameter appropriate to amorphous
solidification, the value of the order parameter is obtained in the liquid and
amorphous solid states, and the chief universal characteristics are determined.
Second, the theory is reformulated in terms of the distribution of local static
density fluctuations rather than the replica order parameter. It is shown that
a suitable free energy can be constructed, depending on the distribution of
static density fluctuations, and that this formulation yields precisely the
same conclusions as the replica approach. Third, the universal predictions of
the theory are compared with the results of extensive numerical simulations of
randomly cross-linked macromolecular systems, due to Barsky and Plischke, and
excellent agreement is found.Comment: 10 pages, including 3 figures (REVTEX
On the relevance of percolation theory to the vulcanization transition
The relationship between vulcanization and percolation is explored from the
perspective of renormalized local field theory. We show rigorously that the
vulcanization and percolation correlation functions are governed by the same
Gell--Mann-Low renormalization group equation. Hence, all scaling aspects of
the vulcanization transition are reigned by the critical exponents of the
percolation universality class.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Chaos in Andreev Billiards
A new type of classical billiard - the Andreev billiard - is investigated
using the tangent map technique. Andreev billiards consist of a normal region
surrounded by a superconducting region. In contrast with previously studied
billiards, Andreev billiards are integrable in zero magnetic field, {\it
regardless of their shape}. A magnetic field renders chaotic motion in a
generically shaped billiard, which is demonstrated for the Bunimovich stadium
by examination of both Poincar\'e sections and Lyapunov exponents. The issue of
the feasibility of certain experimental realizations is addressed.Comment: ReVTeX3.0, 4 pages, 3 figures appended as postscript file (uuencoded
with uufiles
Fate of the Josephson effect in thin-film superconductors
The dc Josephson effect refers to the dissipationless electrical current --
the supercurrent -- that can be sustained across a weak link connecting two
bulk superconductors. This effect is a probe of the fundamental nature of the
superconducting state. Here, we analyze the case of two superconducting thin
films connected by a point contact. Remarkably, the Josephson effect is absent
at nonzero temperature, and the resistance across the contact is nonzero.
Moreover, the point contact resistance is found to vary with temperature in a
nearly activated fashion, with a UNIVERSAL energy barrier determined only by
the superfluid stiffness characterizing the films, an angle characterizing the
geometry, and whether or not the Coulomb interaction between Cooper pairs is
screened. This behavior reflects the subtle nature of the superconductivity in
two-dimensional thin films, and should be testable in detail by future
experiments.Comment: 16 + 8 pages. 1 figure, 1 tabl
Geometric measure of entanglement and applications to bipartite and multipartite quantum states
The degree to which a pure quantum state is entangled can be characterized by
the distance or angle to the nearest unentangled state. This geometric measure
of entanglement, already present in a number of settings (see Shimony 1995 and
Barnum and Linden 2001), is explored for bipartite and multipartite pure and
mixed states. The measure is determined analytically for arbitrary two-qubit
mixed states and for generalized Werner and isotropic states, and is also
applied to certain multipartite mixed states. In particular, a detailed
analysis is given for arbitrary mixtures of three-qubit GHZ, W and inverted-W
states. Along the way, we point out connections of the geometric measure of
entanglement with entanglement witnesses and with the Hartree approximation
method.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, this is a combination of three previous
manuscripts (quant-ph/0212030, quant-ph/0303079, and quant-ph/0303158) made
more extensive and coherent. To appear in PR
Critical Dynamics of Gelation
Shear relaxation and dynamic density fluctuations are studied within a Rouse
model, generalized to include the effects of permanent random crosslinks. We
derive an exact correspondence between the static shear viscosity and the
resistance of a random resistor network. This relation allows us to compute the
static shear viscosity exactly for uncorrelated crosslinks. For more general
percolation models, which are amenable to a scaling description, it yields the
scaling relation for the critical exponent of the shear
viscosity. Here is the thermal exponent for the gel fraction and
is the crossover exponent of the resistor network. The results on the shear
viscosity are also used in deriving upper and lower bounds on the incoherent
scattering function in the long-time limit, thereby corroborating previous
results.Comment: 34 pages, 2 figures (revtex, amssymb); revised version (minor
changes
Competing orders in a magnetic field: spin and charge order in the cuprate superconductors
We describe two-dimensional quantum spin fluctuations in a superconducting
Abrikosov flux lattice induced by a magnetic field applied to a doped Mott
insulator. Complete numerical solutions of a self-consistent large N theory
provide detailed information on the phase diagram and on the spatial structure
of the dynamic spin spectrum. Our results apply to phases with and without
long-range spin density wave order and to the magnetic quantum critical point
separating these phases. We discuss the relationship of our results to a number
of recent neutron scattering measurements on the cuprate superconductors in the
presence of an applied field. We compute the pinning of static charge order by
the vortex cores in the `spin gap' phase where the spin order remains
dynamically fluctuating, and argue that these results apply to recent scanning
tunnelling microscopy (STM) measurements. We show that with a single typical
set of values for the coupling constants, our model describes the field
dependence of the elastic neutron scattering intensities, the absence of
satellite Bragg peaks associated with the vortex lattice in existing neutron
scattering observations, and the spatial extent of charge order in STM
observations. We mention implications of our theory for NMR experiments. We
also present a theoretical discussion of more exotic states that can be built
out of the spin and charge order parameters, including spin nematics and phases
with `exciton fractionalization'.Comment: 36 pages, 33 figures; for a popular introduction, see
http://onsager.physics.yale.edu/superflow.html; (v2) Added reference to new
work of Chen and Ting; (v3) reorganized presentation for improved clarity,
and added new appendix on microscopic origin; (v4) final published version
with minor change
Charge Transport in Manganites: Hopping Conduction, the Anomalous Hall Effect and Universal Scaling
The low-temperature Hall resistivity \rho_{xy} of La_{2/3}A_{1/3}MnO_3 single
crystals (where A stands for Ca, Pb and Ca, or Sr) can be separated into
Ordinary and Anomalous contributions, giving rise to Ordinary and Anomalous
Hall effects, respectively. However, no such decomposition is possible near the
Curie temperature which, in these systems, is close to metal-to-insulator
transition. Rather, for all of these compounds and to a good approximation, the
\rho_{xy} data at various temperatures and magnetic fields collapse (up to an
overall scale), on to a single function of the reduced magnetization
m=M/M_{sat}, the extremum of this function lying at m~0.4. A new mechanism for
the Anomalous Hall Effect in the inelastic hopping regime, which reproduces
these scaling curves, is identified. This mechanism, which is an extension of
Holstein's model for the Ordinary Hall effect in the hopping regime, arises
from the combined effects of the double-exchange-induced quantal phase in
triads of Mn ions and spin-orbit interactions. We identify processes that lead
to the Anomalous Hall Effect for localized carriers and, along the way, analyze
issues of quantum interference in the presence of phonon-assisted hopping. Our
results suggest that, near the ferromagnet-to-paramagnet transition, it is
appropriate to describe transport in manganites in terms of carrier hopping
between states that are localized due to combined effect of magnetic and
non-magnetic disorder. We attribute the qualitative variations in resistivity
characteristics across manganite compounds to the differing strengths of their
carrier self-trapping, and conclude that both disorder-induced localization and
self-trapping effects are important for transport.Comment: 29 pages, 20 figure
Curvature corrections to the nonlocal interfacial model for short-ranged forces
In this paper we revisit the derivation of a nonlocal interfacial Hamiltonian model for systems with short-ranged intermolecular forces. Starting from a microscopic Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson Hamiltonian with a double-parabola potential, we reformulate the derivation of the interfacial model using a rigorous boundary integral approach. This is done for three scenarios: a single fluid phase in contact with a nonplanar substrate (i.e., wall); a free interface separating coexisting fluid phases (say, liquid and gas); and finally a liquid-gas interface in contact with a nonplanar confining wall, as is applicable to wetting phenomena. For the first two cases our approaches identifies the correct form of the curvature corrections to the free energy and, for the case of a free interface, it allows us to recast these as an interfacial self-interaction as conjectured previously in the literature. When the interface is in contact with a substrate our approach similarly identifies curvature corrections to the nonlocal binding potential, describing the interaction of the interface and wall, for which we propose a generalized and improved diagrammatic formulation