23 research outputs found
Symmetric space description of carbon nanotubes
Using an innovative technique arising from the theory of symmetric spaces, we
obtain an approximate analytic solution of the Dorokhov-Mello-Pereyra-Kumar
(DMPK) equation in the insulating regime of a metallic carbon nanotube with
symplectic symmetry and an odd number of conducting channels. This symmetry
class is characterized by the presence of a perfectly conducting channel in the
limit of infinite length of the nanotube. The derivation of the DMPK equation
for this system has recently been performed by Takane, who also obtained the
average conductance both analytically and numerically. Using the Jacobian
corresponding to the transformation to radial coordinates and the
parameterization of the transfer matrix given by Takane, we identify the
ensemble of transfer matrices as the symmetric space of negative curvature
SO^*(4m+2)/[SU(2m+1)xU(1)] belonging to the DIII-odd Cartan class. We rederive
the leading-order correction to the conductance of the perfectly conducting
channel and its variance Var(log(delta g)). Our results are in
complete agreement with Takane's. In addition, our approach based on the
mapping to a symmetric space enables us to obtain new universal quantities: a
universal group theoretical expression for the ratio Var(log(delta
g)/ and as a byproduct, a novel expression for the localization
length for the most general case of a symmetric space with BC_m root system, in
which all three types of roots are present.Comment: 23 pages. Text concerning symmetric space description augmented,
table and references added. Version to be published on JSTA
Nonuniversality in quantum wires with off-diagonal disorder: a geometric point of view
It is shown that, in the scaling regime, transport properties of quantum
wires with off-diagonal disorder are described by a family of scaling equations
that depend on two parameters: the mean free path and an additional continuous
parameter. The existing scaling equation for quantum wires with off-diagonal
disorder [Brouwer et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 862 (1998)] is a special point
in this family. Both parameters depend on the details of the microscopic model.
Since there are two parameters involved, instead of only one, localization in a
wire with off-diagonal disorder is not universal. We take a geometric point of
view and show that this nonuniversality follows from the fact that the group of
transfer matrices is not semi-simple. Our results are illustrated with
numerical simulations for a tight-binding model with random hopping amplitudes.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX; 3 figures included with eps
On the distribution of transmission eigenvalues in disordered wires
We solve the Dorokhov-Mello-Pereyra-Kumar equation which describes the
evolution of an ensamble of disordered wires of increasing length in the three
cases . The solution is obtained by mapping the problem in that of
a suitable Calogero-Sutherland model. In the case our solution is in
complete agreement with that recently found by Beenakker and Rejaei.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, few comments added at the end of the pape
Equivalence of Fokker-Planck approach and non-linear -model for disordered wires in the unitary symmetry class
The exact solution of the Dorokhov-Mello-Pereyra-Kumar-equation for quasi
one-dimensional disordered conductors in the unitary symmetry class is employed
to calculate all -point correlation functions by a generalization of the
method of orthogonal polynomials. We obtain closed expressions for the first
two conductance moments which are valid for the whole range of length scales
from the metallic regime () to the insulating regime () and
for arbitrary channel number. In the limit (with )
our expressions agree exactly with those of the non-linear -model
derived from microscopic Hamiltonians.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, one postscript figur
Disordered quantum wires: microscopic origins of the DMPK theory and Ohm's law
We study the electronic transport properties of the Anderson model on a
strip, modeling a quasi one-dimensional disordered quantum wire. In the
literature, the standard description of such wires is via random matrix theory
(RMT). Our objective is to firmly relate this theory to a microscopic model. We
correct and extend previous work (arXiv:0912.1574) on the same topic. In
particular, we obtain through a physically motivated scaling limit an ensemble
of random matrices that is close to, but not identical to the standard transfer
matrix ensembles (sometimes called TOE, TUE), corresponding to the Dyson
symmetry classes \beta=1,2. In the \beta=2 class, the resulting conductance is
the same as the one from the ideal ensemble, i.e.\ from TUE. In the \beta=1
class, we find a deviation from TOE. It remains to be seen whether or not this
deviation vanishes in a thick-wire limit, which is the experimentally relevant
regime. For the ideal ensembles, we also prove Ohm's law for all symmetry
classes, making mathematically precise a moment expansion by Mello and Stone.
This proof bypasses the explicit but intricate solution methods that underlie
most previous results.Comment: Corrects and extends arXiv:0912.157
Localization and delocalization in dirty superconducting wires
We present Fokker-Planck equations that describe transport of heat and spin
in dirty unconventional superconducting quantum wires. Four symmetry classes
are distinguished, depending on the presence or absence of time-reversal and
spin rotation invariance. In the absence of spin-rotation symmetry, heat
transport is anomalous in that the mean conductance decays like
instead of exponentially fast for large enough length of the wire. The
Fokker-Planck equations in the presence of time-reversal symmetry are solved
exactly and the mean conductance for quasiparticle transport is calculated for
the crossover from the diffusive to the localized regime.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
DIFFUSION IN ONE DIMENSIONAL RANDOM MEDIUM AND HYPERBOLIC BROWNIAN MOTION
Classical diffusion in a random medium involves an exponential functional of
Brownian motion. This functional also appears in the study of Brownian
diffusion on a Riemann surface of constant negative curvature. We analyse in
detail this relationship and study various distributions using stochastic
calculus and functional integration.Comment: 18 page
On Quantum Lie Algebras and Quantum Root Systems
As a natural generalization of ordinary Lie algebras we introduce the concept
of quantum Lie algebras . We define these in terms of certain
adjoint submodules of quantized enveloping algebras endowed with a
quantum Lie bracket given by the quantum adjoint action. The structure
constants of these algebras depend on the quantum deformation parameter and
they go over into the usual Lie algebras when .
The notions of q-conjugation and q-linearity are introduced. q-linear
analogues of the classical antipode and Cartan involution are defined and a
generalised Killing form, q-linear in the first entry and linear in the second,
is obtained. These structures allow the derivation of symmetries between the
structure constants of quantum Lie algebras.
The explicitly worked out examples of and illustrate the
results.Comment: 22 pages, latex, version to appear in J. Phys. A. see
http://www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/~delius/q-lie.html for calculations and further
informatio
Path Integral Approach to the Scattering Theory of Quantum Transport
The scattering theory of quantum transport relates transport properties of
disordered mesoscopic conductors to their transfer matrix \bbox{T}. We
introduce a novel approach to the statistics of transport quantities which
expresses the probability distribution of \bbox{T} as a path integral. The
path integal is derived for a model of conductors with broken time reversal
invariance in arbitrary dimensions. It is applied to the
Dorokhov-Mello-Pereyra-Kumar (DMPK) equation which describes
quasi-one-dimensional wires. We use the equivalent channel model whose
probability distribution for the eigenvalues of \bbox{TT}^{\dagger} is
equivalent to the DMPK equation independent of the values of the forward
scattering mean free paths. We find that infinitely strong forward scattering
corresponds to diffusion on the coset space of the transfer matrix group. It is
shown that the saddle point of the path integral corresponds to ballistic
conductors with large conductances. We solve the saddle point equation and
recover random matrix theory from the saddle point approximation to the path
integral.Comment: REVTEX, 9 pages, no figure
Random matrices beyond the Cartan classification
It is known that hermitean random matrix ensembles can be identified with
symmetric coset spaces of Lie groups, or else with tangent spaces of the same.
This results in a classification of random matrix ensembles as well as
applications in practical calculations of physical observables. In this paper
we show that a large number of non-hermitean random matrix ensembles defined by
physically motivated symmetries - chiral symmetry, time reversal invariance,
space rotation invariance, particle-hole symmetry, or different reality
conditions - can likewise be identified with symmetric spaces. We give explicit
representations of the random matrix ensembles identified with lateral algebra
subspaces, and of the corresponding symmetric subalgebras spanning the group of
invariance. Among the ensembles listed we identify as special cases all the
hermitean ensembles identified with Cartan classes of symmetric spaces and the
three Ginibre ensembles with complex eigenvalues.Comment: 41 pages, no figures. References and comments added; the
representation of ensemble 15 changed to quaternion real. Version accepted
for publication on J. Phys.