556 research outputs found
Nonintegrability of the two-body problem in constant curvature spaces
We consider the reduced two-body problem with the Newton and the oscillator
potentials on the sphere and the hyperbolic plane .
For both types of interaction we prove the nonexistence of an additional
meromorphic integral for the complexified dynamic systems.Comment: 20 pages, typos correcte
Numerical Linked-Cluster Approach to Quantum Lattice Models
We present a novel algorithm that allows one to obtain temperature dependent
properties of quantum lattice models in the thermodynamic limit from exact
diagonalization of small clusters. Our Numerical Linked Cluster (NLC) approach
provides a systematic framework to assess finite-size effects and is valid for
any quantum lattice model. Unlike high temperature expansions (HTE), which have
a finite radius of convergence in inverse temperature, these calculations are
accurate at all temperatures provided the range of correlations is finite. We
illustrate the power of our approach studying spin models on {\it kagom\'e},
triangular, and square lattices.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
The harmonic oscillator on Riemannian and Lorentzian configuration spaces of constant curvature
The harmonic oscillator as a distinguished dynamical system can be defined
not only on the Euclidean plane but also on the sphere and on the hyperbolic
plane, and more generally on any configuration space with constant curvature
and with a metric of any signature, either Riemannian (definite positive) or
Lorentzian (indefinite). In this paper we study the main properties of these
`curved' harmonic oscillators simultaneously on any such configuration space,
using a Cayley-Klein (CK) type approach, with two free parameters \ki, \kii
which altogether correspond to the possible values for curvature and signature
type: the generic Riemannian and Lorentzian spaces of constant curvature
(sphere , hyperbolic plane , AntiDeSitter sphere {\bf
AdS}^{\unomasuno} and DeSitter sphere {\bf dS}^{\unomasuno}) appear in this
family, with the Euclidean and Minkowski spaces as flat limits.
We solve the equations of motion for the `curved' harmonic oscillator and
obtain explicit expressions for the orbits by using three different methods:
first by direct integration, second by obtaining the general CK version of the
Binet's equation and third, as a consequence of its superintegrable character.
The orbits are conics with centre at the potential origin in any CK space,
thereby extending this well known Euclidean property to any constant curvature
configuration space. The final part of the article, that has a more geometric
character, presents those results of the theory of conics on spaces of constant
curvature which are pertinent.Comment: 29 pages, 6 figure
An atom interferometer enabled by spontaneous decay
We investigate the question whether Michelson type interferometry is possible
if the role of the beam splitter is played by a spontaneous process. This
question arises from an inspection of trajectories of atoms bouncing
inelastically from an evanescent-wave (EW) mirror. Each final velocity can be
reached via two possible paths, with a {\it spontaneous} Raman transition
occurring either during the ingoing or the outgoing part of the trajectory. At
first sight, one might expect that the spontaneous character of the Raman
transfer would destroy the coherence and thus the interference. We investigated
this problem by numerically solving the Schr\"odinger equation and applying a
Monte-Carlo wave-function approach. We find interference fringes in velocity
space, even when random photon recoils are taken into account.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, we clarified the semiclassical interpretation of
Fig.
The restricted two-body problem in constant curvature spaces
We perform the bifurcation analysis of the Kepler problem on and .
An analogue of the Delaunay variables is introduced. We investigate the motion
of a point mass in the field of the Newtonian center moving along a geodesic on
and (the restricted two-body problem). When the curvature is small,
the pericenter shift is computed using the perturbation theory. We also present
the results of the numerical analysis based on the analogy with the motion of
rigid body.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figure
Two-dimensional periodic frustrated Ising models in a transverse field
We investigate the interplay of classical degeneracy and quantum dynamics in
a range of periodic frustrated transverse field Ising systems at zero
temperature. We find that such dynamics can lead to unusual ordered phases and
phase transitions, or to a quantum spin liquid (cooperative paramagnetic) phase
as in the triangular and kagome lattice antiferromagnets, respectively. For the
latter, we further predict passage to a bond-ordered phase followed by a
critical phase as the field is tilted. These systems also provide exact
realizations of quantum dimer models introduced in studies of high temperature
superconductivity.Comment: Revised introduction; numerical error in hexagonal section correcte
Two-body quantum mechanical problem on spheres
The quantum mechanical two-body problem with a central interaction on the
sphere is considered. Using recent results in representation
theory an ordinary differential equation for some energy levels is found. For
several interactive potentials these energy levels are calculated in explicit
form.Comment: 41 pages, no figures, typos corrected; appendix D was adde
Pyrochlore Antiferromagnet: A Three-Dimensional Quantum Spin Liquid
The quantum pyrochlore antiferromagnet is studied by perturbative expansions
and exact diagonalization of small clusters. We find that the ground state is a
spin-liquid state: The spin-spin correlation functions decay exponentially with
distance and the correlation length never exceeds the interatomic distance. The
calculated magnetic neutron diffraction cross section is in very good agreement
with experiments performed on Y(Sc)Mn2. The low energy excitations are
singlet-singlet ones, with a finite spin gap.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Low-temperature properties of classical, geometrically frustrated antiferromagnets
We study the ground-state and low-energy properties of classical vector spin
models with nearest-neighbour antiferromagnetic interactions on a class of
geometrically frustrated lattices which includes the kagome and pyrochlore
lattices. We explore the behaviour of these magnets that results from their
large ground-state degeneracies, emphasising universal features and systematic
differences between individual models. We investigate the circumstances under
which thermal fluctuations select a particular subset of the ground states, and
find that this happens only for the models with the smallest ground-state
degeneracies. For the pyrochlore magnets, we give an explicit construction of
all ground states, and show that they are not separated by internal energy
barriers. We study the precessional spin dynamics of the Heisenberg pyrochlore
antiferromagnet. There is no freezing transition or selection of preferred
states. Instead, the relaxation time at low temperature, T, is of order
hbar/(k_B T). We argue that this behaviour can also be expected in some other
systems, including the Heisenberg model for the compound SrCr_8Ga_4O_{19}.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
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