563 research outputs found

    Magneto-elastic interaction in cubic helimagnets with B20 structure

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    The magneto-elastic interaction in cubic helimagnets with B20 symmetry is considered. It is shown that this interaction is responsible for negative contribution to the square of the spin-wave gap Δ\Delta which is alone has to disrupt assumed helical structure. It is suggested that competition between positive part of ΔI2\Delta^2_I which stems from magnon-magnon interaction and its negative magneto-elastic part leads to the quantum phase transition observed at high pressure in MnSiMn Si and FeGeFe Ge. This transition has to occur when Δ2=0\Delta^2=0. For MnSiMn Si from rough estimations at ambient pressure both parts ΔI\Delta_I and ∣ΔME∣|\Delta_{ME}| are comparable with the experimentally observed gap. The magneto-elastic interaction is responsible also for 2\m k modulation of the lattice where \m k is the helix wave-vector and contribution to the magnetic anisotropy. Experimental observation by xx-ray and neutron scattering the lattice modulation allows determine the strength of anisotropic part of the magneto-elastic interaction responsible for above phenomena and the lattice helicity

    Coupled quantum wires

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    We study a set of crossed 1D systems, which are coupled with each other via tunnelling at the crossings. We begin with the simplest case with no electron-electron interactions and find that besides the expected level splitting, bound states can emerge. Next, we include an external potential and electron-electron interactions, which are treated within the Hartree approximation. Then, we write down a formal general solution to the problem, giving additional details for the case of a symmetric external potential. Concentrating on the case of a single crossing, we were able to explain recent experinents on crossed metallic and semiconducting nanotubes [J. W. Janssen, S. G. Lemay, L. P. Kouwenhoven, and C. Dekker, Phys. Rev. B 65, 115423 (2002)], which showed the presence of localized states in the region of crossing.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure

    Why and when the Minkowski's stress tensor can be used in the problem of Casimir force acting on bodies embedded in media

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    It is shown that the criticism by Raabe and Welsch of the Dzyaloshinskii-Lifshitz-Pitaevskii theory of the van der Waals-Casimir forces inside a medium is based on misunderstandings. It is explained why and at which conditions one can use the ''Minkowski-like '' stress tensor for calculations of the forces. The reason, why approach of Raabe and Welsch is incorrect, is discussed.Comment: Comment, 2 pages. 2 misprints were correcte

    Dynamical magnetoelectric effects in multiferroic oxides

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    Multiferroics with coexistent ferroelectric and magnetic orders can provide an interesting laboratory to test unprecedented magnetoelectric responses and their possible applications. One such example is the dynamical and/or resonant coupling between magnetic and electric dipoles in a solid. As the examples of such dynamical magnetoelectric effects, (1) the multiferroic domain wall dynamics and (2) the electric-dipole active magnetic responses are discussed with the overview of recent experimental observations.Comment: 15 pages including 6 figures; Accepted for publication in Phil. Trans. A Roy. Soc. (Special issue, Spin on Electronics

    How does a quadratic term in the energy dispersion modify the single-particle Green's function of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model?

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    We calculate the effect of a quadratic term in the energy dispersion on the low-energy behavior of the Green's function of the spinless Tomonaga-Luttinger model (TLM). Assuming that for small wave-vectors q = k - k_F the fermionic excitation energy relative to the Fermi energy is v_F q + q^2 / (2m), we explicitly calculate the single-particle Green's function for finite but small values of lambda = q_c /(2k_F). Here k_F is the Fermi wave-vector, q_c is the maximal momentum transfered by the interaction, and v_F = k_F / m is the Fermi velocity. Assuming equal forward scattering couplings g_2 = g_4, we find that the dominant effect of the quadratic term in the energy dispersion is a renormalization of the anomalous dimension. In particular, at weak coupling the anomalous dimension is tilde{gamma} = gamma (1 - 2 lambda^2 gamma), where gamma is the anomalous dimension of the TLM. We also show how to treat the change of the chemical potential due to the interactions within the functional bosonization approach in arbitrary dimensions.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figur

    RPAE versus RPA for the Tomonaga model with quadratic energy dispersion

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    Recently the damping of the collective charge (and spin) modes of interacting fermions in one spatial dimension was studied. It results from the nonlinear correction to the energy dispersion in the vicinity of the Fermi points. To investigate the damping one has to replace the random phase approximation (RPA) bare bubble by a sum of more complicated diagrams. It is shown here that a better starting point than the bare RPA is to use the (conserving) linearized time dependent Hartree-Fock equations, i.e. to perform a random phase approximation (with) exchange (RPAE) calculation. It is shown that the RPAE equation can be solved analytically for the special form of the two-body interaction often used in the Luttinger liquid framework. While (bare) RPA and RPAE agree for the case of a strictly linear disperson there are qualitative differences for the case of the usual nonrelativistic quadratic dispersion.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, misprints corrected; to appear in PRB7

    Magnetoelectric effects in single crystals of the cubic ferrimagnetic helimagnet Cu2OSeO3

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    We present magnetodielectric measurements in single crystals of the cubic spin-1/2 compound Cu2_2OSeO3_3. A magnetic field-induced electric polarization (P⃗\vec{P}) and a finite magnetocapacitance (MC) is observed at the onset of the magnetically ordered state (Tc=59T_c = 59 K). Both P⃗\vec{P} and MC are explored in considerable detail as a function of temperature (T), applied field H⃗a\vec{H}_a, and relative field orientations with respect to the crystallographic axes. The magnetodielectric data show a number of anomalies which signal magnetic phase transitions, and allow to map out the phase diagram of the system in the HaH_a-T plane. Below the 3up-1down collinear ferrimagnetic phase, we find two additional magnetic phases. We demonstrate that these are related to the field-driven evolution of a long-period helical phase, which is stabilized by the chiral Dzyalozinskii-Moriya term D \vec{M} \cdot(\bs{\nabla}\times\vec{M}) that is present in this non-centrosymmetric compound. We also present a phenomenological Landau-Ginzburg theory for the MEH_H effect, which is in excellent agreement with experimental data, and shows three novel features: (i) the polarization P⃗\vec{P} has a uniform as well as a long-wavelength spatial component that is given by the pitch of the magnetic helices, (ii) the uniform component of P⃗\vec{P} points along the vector (HyHz,HzHx,HxHy)(H^yH^z, H^zH^x, H^xH^y), and (iii) its strength is proportional to η∥2−η⊥2/2\eta_\parallel^2-\eta_\perp^2/2, where η∥\eta_\parallel is the longitudinal and η⊥\eta_\perp is the transverse (and spiraling) component of the magnetic ordering. Hence, the field dependence of P provides a clear signature of the evolution of a conical helix under a magnetic field. A similar phenomenological theory is discussed for the MC

    Luttinger liquids with curvature: Density correlations and Coulomb drag effect

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    We consider the effect of the curvature in fermionic dispersion on the observable properties of Luttinger liquid (LL). We use the bosonization technique where the curvature is irrelevant perturbation, describing the decay of LL bosons (plasmon modes). When possible, we establish the correspondence between the bosonization and the fermionic approach. We analyze modifications in density correlation functions due to curvature at finite temperatures, T. The most important application of our approach is the analysis of the Coulomb drag by small momentum transfer between two LL, which is only possible due to curvature. Analyzing the a.c. transconductivity in the one-dimensional drag setup, we confirm the results by Pustilnik et al. for T-dependence of drag resistivity, R_{12} ~ T^2 at high and R_{12} ~ T^5 at low temperatures. The bosonization allows for treating both intra- and inter-wire electron-electron interactions in all orders, and we calculate exact prefactors in low-T drag regime. The crossover temperature between the two regimes is T_1 ~ E_F \Delta, with \Delta relative difference in plasmon velocities. We show that \Delta \neq 0 even for identical wires, due to lifting of degeneracy by interwire interaction, U_{12}, leading to crossover from R_{12} ~ U_{12}^2 T^2 to R_{12} \~ T^5/U_{12} at T ~ U_{12}.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, REVTE

    Electromagnon excitations in modulated multiferroics

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    The phenomenological theory of ferroelectricity in spiral magnets presented in [M. Mostovoy, Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 067601 (2006)] is generalized to describe consistently states with both uniform and modulated-in-space ferroelectric polarizations. A key point in this description is the symmetric part of the magnetoelectric coupling since, although being irrelevant for the uniform component, it plays an essential role for the non-uniform part of the polarization. We illustrate this importance in generic examples of modulated magnetic systems: longitudinal and transverse spin-density wave states and planar cycloidal phase. We show that even in the cases with no uniform ferroelectricity induced, polarization correlation functions follow to the soft magnetic behavior of the system due to the magnetoelectric effect. Our results can be easily generalized for more complicated types of magnetic ordering, and the applications may concern various natural and artificial systems in condensed matter physics (e.g., magnon properties could be extracted from dynamic dielectric response measurements).Comment: 5 page

    Electrically driven magnetism on a Pd thin film

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    Using first-principles density functional calculations we demonstrate that ferromagnetism can be induced and modulated on an otherwise paramagnetic Pd metal thin-film surface through application of an external electric field. As free charges are either accumulated or depleted at the Pd surface to screen the applied electric field there is a corresponding change in the surface density of states. This change can be made sufficient for the Fermi-level density of states to satisfy the Stoner criterion, driving a transition locally at the surface from a paramagnetic state to an itinerant ferromagnetic state above a critical applied electric field, Ec. Furthermore, due to the second-order nature of this transition, the surface magnetization of the ferromagnetic state just above the transition exhibits a substantial dependence on electric field, as the result of an enhanced magnetoelectric susceptibility. Using a linearized Stoner model we explain the occurrence of the itinerant ferromagnetism and demonstrate that the magnetic moment on the Pd surface follows a square-root variation with electric field consistent with our first-principles calculations.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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