56 research outputs found
The Faraday effect revisited: Thermodynamic limit
This paper is the second in a series revisiting the (effect of) Faraday
rotation. We formulate and prove the thermodynamic limit for the transverse
electric conductivity of Bloch electrons, as well as for the Verdet constant.
The main mathematical tool is a regularized magnetic and geometric
perturbation theory combined with elliptic regularity and Agmon-Combes-Thomas
uniform exponential decay estimates.Comment: 35 pages, accepted for publication in Journal of Functional Analysi
On the Verdet constant and Faraday rotation for graphene-like materials
We present a rigorous and rather self-contained analysis of the Verdet
constant in graphene- like materials. We apply the gauge-invariant magnetic
perturbation theory to a nearest- neighbour tight-binding model and obtain a
relatively simple and exactly computable formula for the Verdet constant, at
all temperatures and all frequencies of sufficiently large absolute value.
Moreover, for the standard nearest neighbour tight-binding model of graphene we
show that the transverse component of the conductivity tensor has an asymptotic
Taylor expansion in the external magnetic field where all the coefficients of
even powers are zero.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, revised versio
Optimally localized Wannier functions for quasi one-dimensional nonperiodic insulators
It is proved that for general, not necessarily periodic quasi one dimensional
systems, the band position operator corresponding to an isolated part of the
energy spectrum has discrete spectrum and its eigenfunctions have the same
spatial localization as the corresponding spectral projection.
As a consequence, an eigenbasis of the band position operator provides a
basis of optimally localized (generalized) Wannier functions for quasi one
dimensional systems, thus proving the "strong conjecture" of Marzari and
Vanderbilt. If the system has some translation symmetries (e.g. usual
translations, screw transformations), they are "inherited" by the Wannier
basis.Comment: 15 pages, final version. Accepted for publication in J.Phys.
Optical second harmonic generation from Wannier excitons
Excitonic effects in the linear optical response of semiconductors are
well-known and the subject of countless experimental and theoretical studies.
For the technologically important second order nonlinear response, however,
description of excitonic effects has proved to be difficult. In this work, a
simplified three-band Wannier exciton model of cubic semiconductors is applied
and a closed form expression for the complex second harmonic response function
including broadening is derived. Our calculated spectra are found to be in
excellent agreement with the measured response near the band edge. In addition,
a very substantial enhancement of the nonlinear response is predicted for the
transparency region
On the Lipschitz continuity of spectral bands of Harper-like and magnetic Schroedinger operators
We show for a large class of discrete Harper-like and continuous magnetic
Schrodinger operators that their band edges are Lipschitz continuous with
respect to the intensity of the external constant magnetic field. We generalize
a result obtained by J. Bellissard in 1994, and give examples in favor of a
recent conjecture of G. Nenciu.Comment: 15 pages, accepted for publication in Annales Henri Poincar
Adiabatically switched-on electrical bias in continuous systems, and the Landauer-Buttiker formula
Consider a three dimensional system which looks like a cross-connected pipe
system, i.e. a small sample coupled to a finite number of leads. We investigate
the current running through this system, in the linear response regime, when we
adiabatically turn on an electrical bias between leads. The main technical tool
is the use of a finite volume regularization, which allows us to define the
current coming out of a lead as the time derivative of its charge. We finally
prove that in virtually all physically interesting situations, the conductivity
tensor is given by a Landauer-B{\"u}ttiker type formula.Comment: 20 pages, submitte
Optical Hall conductivity in bulk and nanostructured graphene beyond the Dirac approximation
We present a perturbative method for calculating the optical Hall
conductivity in a tight-binding framework based on the Kubo formalism. The
method involves diagonalization only of the Hamiltonian in absence of the
magnetic field, and thus avoids the computational problems usually arising due
to the huge magnetic unit cells required to maintain translational invariance
in presence of a Peierls phase. A recipe for applying the method to numerical
calculations of the magneto-optical response is presented. We apply the
formalism to the case of ordinary and gapped graphene in a next-nearest
neighbour tight-binding model as well as graphene antidot lattices. In both
case, we find unique signatures in the Hall response, that are not captured in
continuum (Dirac) approximations. These include a non-zero optical Hall
conductivity even when the chemical potential is at the Dirac point energy.
Numerical results suggest that this effect should be measurable in experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted in Physical Review
On the spectrum of a waveguide with periodic cracks
The spectral problem on a periodic domain with cracks is studied. An
asymptotic form of dispersion relations is calculated under assumption that the
opening of the cracks is small
Adiabatic non-equilibrium steady states in the partition free approach
Consider a small sample coupled to a finite number of leads, and assume that
the total (continuous) system is at thermal equilibrium in the remote past. We
construct a non-equilibrium steady state (NESS) by adiabatically turning on an
electrical bias between the leads. The main mathematical challenge is to show
that certain adiabatic wave operators exist, and to identify their strong limit
when the adiabatic parameter tends to zero. Our NESS is different from, though
closely related with the NESS provided by the Jak{\v s}i{\'c}-Pillet-Ruelle
approach. Thus we partly settle a question asked by Caroli {\it et al} in 1971
regarding the (non)equivalence between the partitioned and partition-free
approaches
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