1,218,905 research outputs found
Competitions in layered ruthenates: ferro- vs. antiferromagnetism and triplet vs. singlet pairing
Ru based perovskites demonstrate an amazing richness in their magnetic
properties, including 3D and quasi-2D ferromagnetism, antiferromagnetism, and
unconventional superconductivity. Tendency to ferromagnetism, stemming from the
unusually large involvement of O in magnetism in ruthenates, leads to
ferromagnetic spin fluctuations in Sr2RuO4 and eventually to p-wave
superconductivity. A related compound Ca2RuO4 was measured to be
antiferromagnetic, suggesting a possibility of antiferromagnetic fluctuations
in Sr2RuO4 as well. Here we report first principles calculations that
demonstrate that in both compounds the ferro- and antiferromagnetic
fluctuations coexist, leading to an actual instability in Ca2RuO4 and to a
close competition between p-wave and d-wave superconducting symmetries in
Sr2RuO4. The antiferromagnetism in this system appears to be mostly related
with the nesting, which is the strongest at Q=(2pi/3,2pi/3,0). Surprisingly,
for the Fermiology of Sr2RuO4 the p-wave state wins over the d-wave one
everywhere except in close vicinity of the antiferromagnetic instability. The
most stable state within the d-wave channel has vanishing order parameter at
one out of three Fermi surfaces in Sr2RuO4, while in the p channel its
amplitude is comparable at all three of them.Comment: 4 Revtex pages with 4 embedded postscript figure. Some figures are
color, but should look OK in B&W as wel
Confined coherence in quasi-one-dimensional metals
We present a functional renormalization group calculation of the effect of
strong interactions on the shape of the Fermi surface of weakly coupled
metallic chains. In the regime where the bare interchain hopping is small, we
show that scattering processes involving large momentum transfers perpendicular
to the chains can completely destroy the warping of the true Fermi surface,
leading to a confined state where the renormalized interchain hopping vanishes
and a coherent motion perpendicular to the chains is impossible.Comment: 4 RevTex pages, 5 figures,final version as published by PR
Numerical investigation of the effects of pedestrian barriers on aeroelastic stability of a proposed footbridge
A numerical investigation into the aerodynamic characteristics and aeroelastic stability of a proposed footbridge across a motorway in the north of England has been undertaken. The longer than usual span, along with the unusual nature of the pedestrian barriers, indicated that the deck configuration was likely to be beyond the reliable limits of the British design code BD 49/01. In particular, the investigation focussed on the susceptibility of the bridge due to flutter, and to assess if the design wind speeds could be met satisfactorily. The calculations were performed using the discrete vortex method, DIVEX, developed at the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde. DIVEX has been successfully validated on a wide range of problems, including the aeroelastic response of bridge deck sections. The proposed deck configuration, which incorporated a pedestrian barrier comprised of angled flat plates, was found to be unstable at low wind speeds with the plates having a strong turning effect on the flow at the leading edge of the deck. DIVEX was used to assess a number of alternative design options, investigating the stability with respect to flutter for each configuration. Reducing the number of flat plates and their angle to the deck lessened the effect of the barrier on the overall aerodynamic characteristics and increased the stability of the bridge to an acceptable level, with the critical flutter speed in excess of the specified design speed
Renormalization group transformations on quantum states
We construct a general renormalization group transformation on quantum
states, independent of any Hamiltonian dynamics of the system. We illustrate
this procedure for translational invariant matrix product states in one
dimension and show that product, GHZ, W and domain wall states are special
cases of an emerging classification of the fixed points of this
coarse--graining transformation.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figur
Radiative Correction to the Nuclear-Size Effect and Hydrogen-Deuterium Isotopic Shift
The radiative correction to the nuclear charge radius contribution to the
Lamb shift of order is calculated. In view of the
recent high precision experimental data, this theoretical correction produces a
significant contribution to the hydrogen-deuterium isotopic shift.Comment: 5 pages, REVTEX, replaced with the final version, to be published in
Phys.Rev. A, two references adde
Random walk approach to spin dynamics in a two-dimensional electron gas with spin-orbit coupling
We introduce and solve a semi-classical random walk (RW) model that describes
the dynamics of spin polarization waves in zinc-blende semiconductor quantum
wells. We derive the dispersion relations for these waves, including the
Rashba, linear and cubic Dresselhaus spin-orbit interactions, as well as the
effects of an electric field applied parallel to the spin polarization
wavevector. In agreement with fully quantum mechanical calculations [Kleinert
and Bryksin, Phys. Rev. B \textbf{76}, 205326 (2007)], the RW approach predicts
that spin waves acquire a phase velocity in the presence of the field that
crosses zero at a nonzero wavevector, . In addition, we show that the
spin-wave decay rate is independent of field at but increases as
for . These predictions can be tested experimentally by
suitable transient spin grating experiments
- …