1,689 research outputs found
Zero temperature optical conductivity of ultra-clean Fermi liquids and superconductors
We calculate the low-frequency optical conductivity sigma(w) of clean metals
and superconductors at zero temperature neglecting the effects of impurities
and phonons. In general, the frequency and temperature dependences of sigma
have very little in common. For small Fermi surfaces in three dimensions (but
not in 2D) we find for example that Re sigma(w>0)=const. for low w which
corresponds to a scattering rate Gamma proportional to w^2 even in the absence
of Umklapp scattering when there is no T^2 contribution to Gamma. In the main
part of the paper we discuss in detail the optical conductivity of d-wave
superconductors in 2D where Re sigma(w>0) \propto w^4 for the smallest
frequencies and the Umklapp processes typically set in smoothly above a finite
threshold w_0 smaller than twice the maximal gap Delta. In cases where the
nodes are located at (pi/2, pi/2), such that direct Umklapp scattering among
them is possible, one obtains Re sigma(w) \propto w^2.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Crystalline phases in chiral ferromagnets: Destabilization of helical order
In chiral ferromagnets, weak spin-orbit interactions twist the ferromagnetic
order into spirals, leading to helical order. We investigate an extended
Ginzburg-Landau theory of such systems where the helical order is destabilized
in favor of crystalline phases. These crystalline phases are based on periodic
arrangements of double-twist cylinders and are strongly reminiscent of blue
phases in liquid crystals. We discuss the relevance of such blue phases for the
phase diagram of the chiral ferromagnet MnSi.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures (published version
Interplay of disorder and spin fluctuations in the resistivity near a quantum critical point
The resistivity in metals near an antiferromagnetic quantum critical point
(QCP) is strongly affected by small amounts of disorder. In a quasi-classical
treatment, we show that an interplay of strongly anisotropic scattering due to
spin fluctuations and isotropic impurity scattering leads to a large regime
where the resistivity varies as T^alpha, with an anomalous exponent, alpha, 1
<= alpha <= 1.5, depending on the amount of disorder. I argue that this
mechanism explains in some detail the anomalous temperature dependence of the
resistivity observed in CePd_2Si_2, CeNi_2Ge_2 and CeIn_3 near the QCP.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures, published version, only small change
Field-tuned quantum critical point of antiferromagnetic metals
A magnetic field applied to a three-dimensional antiferromagnetic metal can
destroy the long-range order and thereby induce a quantum critical point. Such
field-induced quantum critical behavior is the focus of many recent
experiments. We investigate theoretically the quantum critical behavior of
clean antiferromagnetic metals subject to a static, spatially uniform external
magnetic field. The external field does not only suppress (or induce in some
systems) antiferromagnetism but also influences the dynamics of the order
parameter by inducing spin precession. This leads to an exactly marginal
correction to spin-fluctuation theory. We investigate how the interplay of
precession and damping determines the specific heat, magnetization,
magnetocaloric effect, susceptibility and scattering rates. We point out that
the precession can change the sign of the leading \sqrt{T} correction to the
specific heat coefficient c(T)/T and can induce a characteristic maximum in
c(T)/T for certain parameters. We argue that the susceptibility \chi =\partial
M/\partial B is the thermodynamic quantity which shows the most significant
change upon approaching the quantum critical point and which gives experimental
access to the (dangerously irrelevant) spin-spin interactions.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Thermal Conductivity of Spin-1/2 Chains
We study the low-temperature transport properties of clean one-dimensional
spin-1/2 chains coupled to phonons. Due to the presence of approximate
conservation laws, the heat current decays very slowly giving rise to an
exponentially large heat conductivity, . As a result of an
interplay of Umklapp scattering and spinon-phonon coupling, the characteristic
energy scale turns out to be of order , where is
the Debye energy, rather than the magnetic exchange interaction -- in
agreement with recent measurements in SrCuO compounds. A large magnetic field
strongly affects the heat transport by two distinct mechanisms. First, it
induces a LINEAR spinon--phonon coupling, which alters the nature of the fixed point: the elementary excitations of the system are COMPOSITE
SPINON-PHONON objects. Second, the change of the magnetization and the
corresponding change of the wave vector of the spinons strongly affects the way
in which various Umklapp processes can relax the heat current, leading to a
characteristic fractal--like spiky behavior of when plotted as a
function of magnetization at fixed T.Comment: 16 pages, RevTex4, 2 figures included; revised refs. and some useful
comments on experimental relevance. On July 12 2005, added an appendix
correcting an error in the form of the phonon propagator. The main result is
unchange
Advanced information processing system for advanced launch system: Avionics architecture synthesis
The Advanced Information Processing System (AIPS) is a fault-tolerant distributed computer system architecture that was developed to meet the real time computational needs of advanced aerospace vehicles. One such vehicle is the Advanced Launch System (ALS) being developed jointly by NASA and the Department of Defense to launch heavy payloads into low earth orbit at one tenth the cost (per pound of payload) of the current launch vehicles. An avionics architecture that utilizes the AIPS hardware and software building blocks was synthesized for ALS. The AIPS for ALS architecture synthesis process starting with the ALS mission requirements and ending with an analysis of the candidate ALS avionics architecture is described
Revealing puddles of electrons and holes in compensated topological insulators
Three-dimensional topological insulators harbour metallic surface states with
exotic properties. In transport or optics, these properties are typically
masked by defect-induced bulk carriers. Compensation of donors and acceptors
reduces the carrier density, but the bulk resistivity remains disappointingly
small. We show that measurements of the optical conductivity in BiSbTeSe
pinpoint the presence of electron-hole puddles in the bulk at low temperatures,
which is essential for understanding DC bulk transport. The puddles arise from
large fluctuations of the Coulomb potential of donors and acceptors, even in
the case of full compensation. Surprisingly, the number of carriers appearing
within puddles drops rapidly with increasing temperature and almost vanishes
around 40 K. Monte Carlo simulations show that a highly non-linear screening
effect arising from thermally activated carriers destroys the puddles at a
temperature scale set by the Coulomb interaction between neighbouring dopants,
explaining the experimental observation semi-quantitatively. This mechanism
remains valid if donors and acceptors do not compensate perfectly.Comment: 11 pages with 7 figures plus supplemental material (3 pages
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