317 research outputs found
New effective interaction for -shell nuclei and its implications for the stability of the ==28 closed core
The effective interaction GXPF1 for shell-model calculations in the full
shell is tested in detail from various viewpoints such as binding energies,
electro-magnetic moments and transitions, and excitation spectra. The
semi-magic structure is successfully described for or Z=28 nuclei,
Mn, Fe, Co and Ni, suggesting the
existence of significant core-excitations in low-lying non-yrast states as well
as in high-spin yrast states. The results of odd-odd nuclei, Co
and Cu, also confirm the reliability of GXPF1 interaction in the isospin
dependent properties. Studies of shape coexistence suggest an advantage of
Monte Carlo Shell Model over conventional calculations in cases where
full-space calculations still remain too large to be practical.Comment: 29pages, 26figures, to be published in Physical Review
Demystification of Mizusaki’s α-factor for the positively-deviated defect behavior of hyperstoichiometric oxides
Many hyperstoichiometric (p-type) ternary or higher oxides of present technological interests, e.g., La1-xSrxCrO3-δ exhibit a positive deviation from the ideal defect structure. Mizusaki et al. [1] could beautifully explain the positively-deviated defect structure by introducing an empirical factor α such as
ΔHxs=αδ.
Here, ΔHxs stands for the excess enthalpy of oxidation reaction involving oxygen vacancies and holes or
1/2 O2+VO••=OOx+2h• .
The authors[1] interpreted this α-factor as representing the interactions among lattice ions and defects, but its true physico-chemical face has since remained a mystery notwithstanding so frequent invoking to the defect chemistry stage.
It has recently turned out that this factor corresponds to the first order approximation of the hole-degeneracy effect. We will demystify this α-factor in this line.
[1] J. Mizusaki, S, Yamauchi, K. Fueki, and A. Ishikawa, “Nonstoichiometry of the perovskite-type oxide La1-xSrxCrO3-δ,” Solid State Ionics 12 (1984) 119
Effective interaction for pf-shell nuclei
An effective interaction is derived for use in the full pf basis. Starting
from a realistic G-matrix interaction, 195 two-body matrix elements and 4
single-particle energies are determined by fitting to 699 energy data in the
mass range 47 to 66. The derived interaction successfully describes various
structures of pf-shell nuclei. As examples, systematics of the energies of the
first 2+ states in the Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, and Ni isotope chains and energy levels
of 56,57,58Ni are presented. The appearance of a new magic number 34 is seen.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Precise estimation of shell model energy by second order extrapolation method
A second order extrapolation method is presented for shell model
calculations, where shell model energies of truncated spaces are well described
as a function of energy variance by quadratic curves and exact shell model
energies can be obtained by the extrapolation. This new extrapolation can give
more precise energy than those of first order extrapolation method. It is also
clarified that first order extrapolation gives a lower limit of shell model
energy. In addition to the energy, we derive the second order extrapolation
formula for expectation values of other observables.Comment: PRC in pres
Quantum-number projection in the path-integral renormalization group method
We present a quantum-number projection technique which enables us to exactly
treat spin, momentum and other symmetries embedded in the Hubbard model. By
combining this projection technique, we extend the path-integral
renormalization group method to improve the efficiency of numerical
computations. By taking numerical calculations for the standard Hubbard model
and the Hubbard model with next nearest neighbor transfer, we show that the
present extended method can extremely enhance numerical accuracy and that it
can handle excited states, in addition to the ground state.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Low-temperature specific heat for ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders in CaRu1-xMnxO3
Low-temperature specific heat of CaRu1-xMnxO3 was measured to clarify the
role of d electrons in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders observed
above x=0.2. Specific heat divided by temperature C_p/T is found to roughly
follow a T^2 function, and relatively large magnitudes of electronic specific
heat coefficient gamma were obtained in wide x range. In particular, gamma is
unchanged from the value at x=0 (84 mJ/K^2 mol) in the paramagnetic state for
x<=0.1, but linearly reduced with increasing x above x= 0.2. These features of
gamma strongly suggest that itinerant d electrons are tightly coupled with the
evolution of magnetic orders in small and intermediate Mn concentrations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. (SCES
2011, Cambridge, UK
Half quantum vortex in superfluid He-A phase in parallel plate geometry
The half quantum vortex(HQV) in condensate has been studied, since it was
predicted by Salomaa and Volovik in superfluid He-A phase. However, an
experimental evidence for its existence has not been reported so far. Motivated
by a recent experimental report by Yamashita et al\cite{yamashita}, we study
the HQVs in superfluid He confined between two parallel plates with a gap D
10 m in the presence of a magnetic field H 26 mT
perpendicular to the parallel plates. We find that the bound HQVs are more
stable than the singular vortices and free pairs of HQVs, when the rotation
perpendicular to the parallel plates is below the critical speed, 2 rad/s. The bound pair of HQVs accompanies the tilting of -vector out of the plane, which leads to an additional absorption in NMR
spectra. Our study appears to describe the temperature and rotation dependence
of the observed satellite NMR signal, which supports the existence of the HQVs
in He.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Bipolaron Density-Wave Driven By Antiferromagnetic Correlations and Frustration in Organic Superconductors
We describe the Paired Electron Crystal (PEC) which occurs in the interacting
frustrated two-dimensional 1/4-filled band. The PEC is a charge-ordered state
with nearest-neighbor spin singlets separated by pairs of vacant sites, and can
be thought of as a bipolaron density wave. The PEC has been experimentally
observed in the insulating state proximate to superconductivity in the organic
charge-transfer solids. Increased frustration drives a PEC-to-superconductor
transition in these systems.Comment: submitted to Physica B special issue for ISCOM 200
Variational Monte Carlo Study of Electron Differentiation around Mott Transition
We study ground-state properties of the two-dimensional Hubbard model at half
filling by improving variational Monte Carlo method and by implementing
quantum-number projection and multi-variable optimization. The improved
variational wave function enables a highly accurate description of the Mott
transition and strong fluctuations in metals. We clarify how anomalous metals
appear near the first-order Mott transition. The double occupancy stays nearly
constant as a function of the on-site Coulomb interaction in the metallic phase
near the Mott transition in agreement with the previous unbiased results. This
unconventional metal at half filling is stabilized by a formation of
``electron-like pockets'' coexisting with an arc structure, which leads to a
prominent differentiation of electrons in momentum space. An abrupt collapse of
the ``pocket'' and ``arc'' drives the first-order Mott transition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
- …