2,090 research outputs found
Quantum channels in random spin chains
We study the entanglement between pairs of qubits in a random
antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 chain at zero temperature. We show that some very
distant pairs of qubits are highly entangled, being almost pure Bell states.
Furthermore, the probability to obtain such spin pairs is proportional to the
chain disorder strenght and inversely proportional to the square of their
separation.Comment: v1: 4 pages, 2 eps figures; v2: discussion about the effect of
temperature added, v3: 1 eps figure added, enlarged discussions, 6 pages,
published versio
Lie Algebraic Similarity Transformed Hamiltonians for Lattice Model Systems
We present a class of Lie algebraic similarity transformations generated by
exponentials of two-body on-site hermitian operators whose Hausdorff series can
be summed exactly without truncation. The correlators are defined over the
entire lattice and include the Gutzwiller factor
, and two-site products of density
and spin
operators. The resulting non-hermitian many-body Hamiltonian can be solved in a
biorthogonal mean-field approach with polynomial computational cost. The
proposed similarity transformation generates locally weighted orbital
transformations of the reference determinant. Although the energy of the model
is unbound, projective equations in the spirit of coupled cluster theory lead
to well-defined solutions. The theory is tested on the 1D and 2D repulsive
Hubbard model where we find accurate results across all interaction strengths.Comment: The supplemental material is include
Multi-Fluid Simulation of the Magnetic Field Evolution in Neutron Stars
Using a numerical simulation, we study the effects of ambipolar diffusion and
ohmic diffusion on the magnetic field evolution in the interior of an isolated
neutron star. We are interested in the behavior of the magnetic field on a long
time scale, over which all Alfven and sound waves have been damped. We model
the stellar interior as an electrically neutral plasma composed of neutrons,
protons and electrons, which can interact with each other through collisions
and electromagnetic forces. Weak interactions convert neutrons and charged
particles into each other, erasing chemical imbalances. As a first step, we
assume that the magnetic field points in one fixed Cartesian direction but can
vary along an orthogonal direction. We start with a uniform-density background
threaded by a homogeneous magnetic field and study the evolution of a magnetic
perturbation as well as the density fluctuations it induces in the particles.
We show that the system evolves through different quasi-equilibrium states and
estimate the characteristic time scales on which these quasi-equilibria occur.Comment: It will be published in AIP Proceedings of the Conference '40 Years
of Pulsars: Milisecond Pulsars, Magnetars and More' held at University of
McGill, Montreal, Canada, August 2007. Contributed Talk at Conference '40
Years of Pulsars: Milisecond Pulsars, Magnetars and More
Excited electronic states from a variational approach based on symmetry-projected Hartree--Fock configurations
Recent work from our research group has demonstrated that symmetry-projected
Hartree--Fock (HF) methods provide a compact representation of molecular ground
state wavefunctions based on a superposition of non-orthogonal Slater
determinants. The symmetry-projected ansatz can account for static correlations
in a computationally efficient way. Here we present a variational extension of
this methodology applicable to excited states of the same symmetry as the
ground state. Benchmark calculations on the C dimer with a modest basis
set, which allows comparison with full configuration interaction results,
indicate that this extension provides a high quality description of the
low-lying spectrum for the entire dissociation profile. We apply the same
methodology to obtain the full low-lying vertical excitation spectrum of
formaldehyde, in good agreement with available theoretical and experimental
data, as well as to a challenging model insertion pathway for BeH.
The variational excited state methodology developed in this work has two
remarkable traits: it is fully black-box and will be applicable to fairly large
systems thanks to its mean-field computational cost
Composite fermion-boson mapping for fermionic lattice models
We present a mapping of elementary fermion operators onto a quadratic form of
composite fermionic and bosonic operators. The mapping is an exact isomorphism
as long as the physical constraint of one composite particle per cluster is
satisfied. This condition is treated on average in a composite particle
mean-field approach, which consists of an ansatz that decouples the composite
fermionic and bosonic sectors. The theory is tested on the one- and
two-dimensional Hubbard models. Using a Bogoliubov determinant for the
composite fermions and either a coherent or Bogoliubov state for the bosons, we
obtain a simple and accurate procedure for treating the Mott insulating phase
of the Hubbard model with mean-field computational cost
Valence-bond theory of highly disordered quantum antiferromagnets
We present a large-N variational approach to describe the magnetism of
insulating doped semiconductors based on a disorder-generalization of the
resonating-valence-bond theory for quantum antiferromagnets. This method
captures all the qualitative and even quantitative predictions of the
strong-disorder renormalization group approach over the entire experimentally
relevant temperature range. Finally, by mapping the problem on a hard-sphere
fluid, we could provide an essentially exact analytic solution without any
adjustable parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figure
Synchrotron radiation photoionization mass spectrometry of laser ablated species
The present paper describes an experimental apparatus suitable to create and study free clusters by combining laser ablation and synchrotron radiation. First tests on sulfur samples, S, showed the production, through laser ablation, of neutral Sn clusters (n = 1–8). These clusters were ionized using synchrotron radiation at photon energies from 160 eV to 175 eV, across the S 2p core edge. The feasibility of such combined ablation–synchrotron radiation experiments is demonstrated, opening new possibilities on the investigation of free clusters and radical
- …