6,181 research outputs found
Non conventional screening of the Coulomb interaction in low dimensional and finite size system
We study the screening of the Coulomb interaction in non polar systems by
polarizable atoms. We show that in low dimensions and small finite size systems
this screening deviates strongly from that conventionally assumed. In fact in
one dimension the short range interaction is strongly screened and the long
range interaction is anti-screened thereby strongly reducing the gradient of
the Coulomb interaction and therefore the correlation effects. We argue that
this effect explains the success of mean field single particle theories for
large molecules.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Spacetime Encodings II - Pictures of Integrability
I visually explore the features of geodesic orbits in arbitrary stationary
axisymmetric vacuum (SAV) spacetimes that are constructed from a complex Ernst
potential. Some of the geometric features of integrable and chaotic orbits are
highlighted. The geodesic problem for these SAV spacetimes is rewritten as a
two degree of freedom problem and the connection between current ideas in
dynamical systems and the study of two manifolds sought. The relationship
between the Hamilton-Jacobi equations, canonical transformations, constants of
motion and Killing tensors are commented on. Wherever possible I illustrate the
concepts by means of examples from general relativity. This investigation is
designed to build the readers' intuition about how integrability arises, and to
summarize some of the known facts about two degree of freedom systems. Evidence
is given, in the form of orbit-crossing structure, that geodesics in SAV
spacetimes might admit, a fourth constant of motion that is quartic in momentum
(by contrast with Kerr spacetime, where Carter's fourth constant is quadratic).Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
The BLG Theory in Light-Cone Superspace
The light-cone superspace version of the d=3, N=8 superconformal theory of
Bagger, Lambert and Gustavsson (BLG) is obtained as a solution to constraints
imposed by OSp(2,2|8) superalgebra. The Hamiltonian of the theory is shown to
be a quadratic form of the dynamical supersymmetry transformation.Comment: 45 pages, v2: reference added, minor typos corrected, published
versio
Electronic Correlations in Oligo-acene and -thiophene Organic Molecular Crystals
From first principles calculations we determine the Coulomb interaction
between two holes on oligo-acene and -thiophene molecules in a crystal, as a
function of the oligomer length. The relaxation of the molecular geometry in
the presence of holes is found to be small. In contrast, the electronic
polarization of the molecules that surround the charged oligomer, reduces the
bare Coulomb repulsion between the holes by approximately a factor of two. In
all cases the effective hole-hole repulsion is much larger than the calculated
valence bandwidth, which implies that at high doping levels the properties of
these organic semiconductors are determined by electron-electron correlations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Requirements under EU Law on the allocation of scarce European subsidies
The Legitimacy and Effectiveness of Law & Governance in a World of Multilevel Jurisdiction
Pure spinor superfields -- an overview
Maximally supersymmetric theories do not allow off-shell superspace
formulations with traditional superfields containing a finite set of auxiliary
fields. It has become clear that off-shell supersymmetric action formulations
of such models can be achieved by the introduction of pure spinors. In this
talk, an overview of this formalism is given, with emphasis on D=10
super-Yang-Mills theory and D=11 supergravity. This a somewhat expanded version
of a talk presented at the workshop "Breaking of supersymmetry and ultraviolet
divergences in extended supergravity" (BUDS), Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati,
March 25-28, 2013.Comment: 34 pp., 2 figs., contributions to the proceedings of the workshop
"Breaking of supersymmetry and ultraviolet divergences in extended
supergravity" (BUDS), Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati, March 25-28, 201
Reentrant metallic transition at a temperature above Tc at the breakdown of cooperative Jahn-Teller orbital order in perovskite manganites
We report an interesting reentrant metallic resistivity pattern beyond a
characteristic temperature T* which is higher than other such characteristic
transition temperatures like T(c)(Curie point), T(N) (Neel point), T(CO)
(charge order onset point) or T(OO) (orbital order onset point) in a range of
rare-erath perovskite manganites (RE(1-x)A(x)MnO(3); RE = La, Nd, Y; A = Sr,
Ca; x = 0.0-0.5). Such a behavior is normally observed in doped manganites with
doping level (x) higher than the critical doping level x(c) (= 0.17-0.22)
required for the metallic ground state to emerge and hence in a system where
cooperative Jahn-Teller orbital order has already undergone a breakdown.
However, the observation made in the La(1-x)Ca(x)MnO(3) (x = 0.0-0.5) series
turns out to be an exception to this general trend.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures; pdf onl
Quantum hierarchic models for information processing
Both classical and quantum computations operate with the registers of bits.
At nanometer scale the quantum fluctuations at the position of a given bit,
say, a quantum dot, not only lead to the decoherence of quantum state of this
bit, but also affect the quantum states of the neighboring bits, and therefore
affect the state of the whole register. That is why the requirement of reliable
separate access to each bit poses the limit on miniaturization, i.e, constrains
the memory capacity and the speed of computation. In the present paper we
suggest an algorithmic way to tackle the problem of constructing reliable and
compact registers of quantum bits. We suggest to access the states of quantum
register hierarchically, descending from the state of the whole register to the
states of its parts. Our method is similar to quantum wavelet transform, and
can be applied to information compression, quantum memory, quantum
computations.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, 1 eps figur
Orbital order in classical models of transition-metal compounds
We study the classical 120-degree and related orbital models. These are the
classical limits of quantum models which describe the interactions among
orbitals of transition-metal compounds. We demonstrate that at low temperatures
these models exhibit a long-range order which arises via an "order by disorder"
mechanism. This strongly indicates that there is orbital ordering in the
quantum version of these models, notwithstanding recent rigorous results on the
absence of spin order in these systems.Comment: 7 pages, 1 eps fi
Orbital order-disorder transition in La(1-x)Nd(x)MnO(3) (x = 0.0-1.0) and La(1-x-y)Nd(yx)Sr(y)MnO(3) (x = 0.1; y = 0.05,0.1)
The nature of orbital order-disorder transition has been studied in the
La(1-x)Nd(x)MnO(3) (x = 0.0-1.0) series which covers the entire range between
two end points - LaMnO(3) and NdMnO(3) - as well as in
La(0.85)Nd(0.1)Sr(0.05)MnO(3) and La(0.8)Nd(0.1)Sr(0.1)MnO(3). It has been
observed that the first-order nature of the transition gives way to higher
order with the increase in "x" in the case of pure manganites. The latent heat
(L) associated with the transition, first, drops with a steeper slope within x
= 0.0-0.3 and, then, gradually over a range 0.3<x<0.9. This drop could,
possibly, be due to evolution of finer orbital domain structure with "x". In
the case of Sr-doped samples, the transition appears to be of higher-order
nature even for a doping level 5 at%. In both cases, of course, the transition
temperature T(JT) rises systematically with the drop in average A-site radius
or rise in average Mn-O-Mn bond bending angle while no
apparent correlation could be observed with doping induced disorder sigma^2.
The cooperative nature of the orbital order, therefore, appears to be robust.Comment: 15 pages including 4 figures; pdf onl
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