247 research outputs found
Pseudogap phase formation in the crossover from Bose-Einstein condensation to BCS superconductivity
A phase diagram for a 2D metal with variable carrier density has been
derived. It consists of a normal phase, where the order parameter is absent; a
so-called ``abnormal normal'' phase where this parameter is also absent but the
mean number of composite bosons (bound pairs) exceeds the mean number of free
fermions; a pseudogap phase where the absolute value of the order parameter
gradually increases but its phase is a random value, and finally a
superconducting (here Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless) phase. The
characteristic transition temperatures between these phases are found. The
chemical potential and paramagnetic susceptibility behavior as functions of the
fermion density and the temperature are also studied. An attempt is made to
qualitatively compare the resulting phase diagram with the features of
underdoped high- superconducting compounds above their critical
temperature.Comment: 26 pages, revtex, 5 EMTeX figures; more discussion and references
added; to be published in JET
On the correct strong-coupling limit in the evolution from BCS superconductivity to Bose-Einstein condensation
We consider the problem of the crossover from BCS superconductivity to
Bose-Einstein condensation in three dimensions for a system of fermions with an
attractive interaction, for which we adopt the simplifying assumption of a
suitably regularized point-contact interaction. We examine in a critical way
the fermionic (self-consistent) T-matrix approximation which has been widely
utilized in the literature to describe this crossover above the superconducting
critical temperature, and show that it fails to yield the correct behaviour of
the system in the strong-coupling limit, where composite bosons form as tightly
bound fermion pairs. We then set up the correct approximation for a ``dilute''
system of composite bosons and show that an entire new class of diagrams has to
be considered in the place of the fermionic T-matrix approximation for the
self-energy. This new class of diagrams correctly describes both the weak- and
strong-coupling limits, and consequently results into an improved interpolation
scheme for the intermediate (crossover) region. In this context, we provide
also a systematic mapping between the corresponding diagrammatic theories for
the composite bosons and the constituent fermions. As a preliminary result to
demonstrate the numerical effect of our new class of diagrams on physical
quantities, we calculate the value of the scattering length for composite
bosons in the strong-coupling limit and show that it is considerably modified
with respect to the result obtained within the self-consistent fermionic
T-matrix approximation.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures included in pape
Polymorphisms within immune regulatory pathways predict cetuximab efficacy and survival in metastatic colorectal cancer patients
Cetuximab, an IgG1 EGFR-directed antibody, promotes antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity. We hypothesized that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in immune regulatory pathways may predict outcomes in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer treated with cetuximab-based regimens. A total of 924 patients were included: 105 received cetuximab in IMCL-0144 and cetuximab/irinotecan in GONO-ASL608LIOM01 (training cohort), 225 FOLFIRI/cetuximab in FIRE-3 (validation cohort 1), 74 oxaliplatin/cetuximab regimens in JACCRO CC-05/06 (validation cohort 2), and 520 FOLFIRI/bevacizumab in FIRE-3 and TRIBE (control cohorts). Twelve SNPs in five genes (IDO1; PD-L1; PD-1; CTLA-4; CD24) were evaluated by PCR-based direct sequencing. We analyzed associations between genotype and clinical outcomes. In the training cohort; patients with the CD24 rs52812045 A/A genotype had a significantly shorter median PFS and OS than those with the G/G genotype (PFS 1.3 vs. 3.6 months; OS 2.3 vs. 7.8 months) in univariate (PFS HR 3.62; p = 0.001; OS HR 3.27; p = 0.0004) and multivariate (PFS HR 3.18; p = 0.009; OS HR 4.93; p = 0.001) analyses. Similarly; any A allele carriers in the JACCRO validation cohort had a significantly shorter PFS than G/G carriers (9.2 vs. 11.8 months; univariate HR 1.90; p = 0.011; multivariate HR 2.12; p = 0.018). These associations were not demonstrated in the control cohorts. CD24 genetic variants may help select patients with metastatic colorectal cancer most likely to benefit from cetuximab-based therapy
Nonperturbative XY-model approach to strong coupling superconductivity in two and three dimensions
For an electron gas with delta-function attraction we investigate the
crossover from weak- to strong-coupling supercoductivity in two and three
dimensions. We derive analytic expressions for the stiffness of phase
fluctuations and set up effective XY-models which serve to determine
nonperturbatively the temperature of phase decoherence where superconductivity
breaks down. We find the transition temperature T_c as a monotonous function of
the coupling strength and carrier density both in two and three dimensions, and
give analytic formulas for the merging of the temperature of phase decoherence
with the temperature of pair formation in the weak-coupling limit.Comment: Few typos corrected. Emails that were sent to the address
[email protected] in June and July 1999 were lost in a computer crash, so if
your comments were not answered please send them once mor
Role of symmetry and dimension on pseudogap phenomena
The attractive Hubbard model in d=2 is studied through Monte Carlo
simulations at intermediate coupling. There is a crossover temperature
where a pseudogap appears with concomitant precursors of Bogoliubov
quasiparticles that are not local pairs. The pseudogap in occurs
in the renormalized classical regime when the correlation length is larger than
the direction-dependent thermal de Broglie wave length, The ratio for the pseudogap may be made
arbitrarily large when the system is close to a point where the order parameter
has SO(n) symmetry with n>2. This is relevant in the context of SO(5) theories
of high but has more general applicability.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 4 epsf figures included. Corrected to agree with
published version. Main change, one new figur
Theory of Electric Transport in the Pseudogap State of High-Tc Cuprates
We theoretically investigate the electric transport in the pseudogap state of
High-Tc cuprates. Starting from the repulsive Hubbard model, we perform the
microscopic calculation to describe the pseudogap phenomena which are induced
by the superconducting fluctuations. The single particle Green function, spin
susceptibility and superconducting fluctuations are self-consistently
determined by the SC-FLEX+T-matrix approximation. The longitudinal and
transverse conductivities are calculated by using the Eliashberg and
Kohno-Yamada formalism. The effects of the spin fluctuations and
superconducting fluctuations are estimated, respectively. The vertex
corrections arising from the two fluctuations are also calculated. The
additional contribution from the Aslamazov-Larkin term is also estimated beyond
the Eliashberg formalism.
It is shown that the main effect of the superconducting fluctuations is the
feedback effect through the spin fluctuations. The correct results are obtained
by considering the superconducting fluctuations and the spin fluctuations
simultaneously. The temperature and doping dependences of the resistivity and
the Hall coefficient are well explained. We point out that the characteristic
momentum dependence of the systems plays an essential role in this explanation.Comment: To appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Vol.71 No.1 (2002
The effect of phase fluctuations on the single-particle properties of the underdoped cuprates
We study the effect of order parameter phase fluctuations on the
single-particle properties of fermions in the underdoped cuprate
superconductors using a phenomenological low-energy theory. We identify the
fermion-phase field coupling as the Doppler-shift of the quasiparticle spectrum
induced by the fluctuating superfluid velocity and we calculate the effect of
these fluctuations on the fermion self-energy. We show that the vortex pair
unbinding near the superconducting transition causes a significant broadening
in the fermion spectral function, producing a pseudogap-like feature. We also
discuss the specific heat and show that the phase fluctuation effect is visible
due to the short coherence length.Comment: RevTex 11 pages; 11 epsf figures included. Added and updated
reference
Ginzburg-Landau theory of superconductors with short coherence length
We consider Fermions in two dimensions with an attractive interaction in the
singlet d-wave channel of arbitrary strength. By means of a
Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation a statistical Ginzburg-Landau theory is
derived, which describes the smooth crossover from a weak-coupling BCS
superconductor to a condensate of composite Bosons. Adjusting the interaction
strength to the observed slope of H_c2 at T_c in the optimally doped high-T_c
compounds YBCO and BSCCO, we determine the associated values of the
Ginzburg-Landau correlation length xi and the London penetration depth lambda.
The resulting dimensionless ratio k_F xi(0) approx 5-8 and the Ginzburg-Landau
parameter kappa=lambda xi approx 90-100 agree well with the experimentally
observed values. These parameters indicate that the optimally doped materials
are still on the weak coupling side of the crossover to a Bose regime.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX, 6 postscript figures, resubmitted with minor
changes in section III, to appear in Physical Review
Shrinking of a condensed fermionic cloud in a trap approaching the BEC limit
We determine the zero-temperature density profile of a cloud of fermionic
atoms in a trap subject to a mutual attractive interaction, as the strength of
the interaction is progressively increased. We find a significant decrease of
the size of the atomic cloud as it evolves from the weak-coupling (BCS) regime
of overlapping Cooper pairs to the strong-coupling (Bose-Einstein) regime of
non-overlapping bound-fermion pairs. Most significantly, we find a pronounced
increase of the value of the density at the center of the trap (even by an
order of magnitude) when evolving between the two regimes. Our results are
based on a generalized Thomas-Fermi approximation for the superfluid state,
that covers continuously all coupling regimes.Comment: 5 pages, 3 postscript figure
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