327 research outputs found
The influence of droplet size on line tension
Within the effective interfacial Hamiltonian approach we evaluate the excess
line free energy associated with cylinder-shaped droplets sessile on a
stripe-like chemical inhomogeneity of a planar substrate. In the case of
short-range intermolecular forces the droplet morphology and the corresponding
expression for the line tension - which includes the inhomogeneity finite width
effects - are derived and discussed as functions of temperature and increasing
width. The width-dependent contributions to the line tension change their
structure at the stripe wetting temperature T_W1: for T<T_W1 they decay
exponentially while for T>T_W1 the decay is algebraic. In addition, a geometric
construction of the corresponding contact angle is carried out and its
implications are discussed
Self-adjoint symmetry operators connected with the magnetic Heisenberg ring
We consider symmetry operators a from the group ring C[S_N] which act on the
Hilbert space H of the 1D spin-1/2 Heisenberg magnetic ring with N sites. We
investigate such symmetry operators a which are self-adjoint (in a sence
defined in the paper) and which yield consequently observables of the
Heisenberg model. We prove the following results: (i) One can construct a
self-adjoint idempotent symmetry operator from every irreducible character of
every subgroup of S_N. This leads to a big manifold of observables. In
particular every commutation symmetry yields such an idempotent. (ii) The set
of all generating idempotents of a minimal right ideal R of C[S_N] contains one
and only one idempotent which ist self-adjoint. (iii) Every self-adjoint
idempotent e can be decomposed into primitive idempotents e = f_1 + ... + f_k
which are also self-adjoint and pairwise orthogonal. We give a computer
algorithm for the calculation of such decompositions. Furthermore we present 3
additional algorithms which are helpful for the calculation of self-adjoint
operators by means of discrete Fourier transforms of S_N. In our investigations
we use computer calculations by means of our Mathematica packages PERMS and
HRing.Comment: 13 page
Interfacial morphology and correlations in adsorption at a chemically structured substrate - exact results in d=2
Adsorption at a 1-dimensional planar substrate equipped with a localized
chemical inhomogeneity is studied within the framework of a continuum
interfacial model from the point of view of interfacial morphology and
correlation function properties. Exact expressions for the one-point and
two-point probability distribution functions and
, being the
interface position above a fixed point of the substrate, are derived
for temperature corresponding to the inhomogeneity's wetting transition. It is
demonstrated that in the limit of macroscopic inhomogeneity's size the net
effect of the remaining homogeneous parts of the substrate on the interfacial
morphology above the inhomogeneity is exactly equivalent to appropriate pinning
of the interface at its boundaries. The structure of the average interfacial
morphology and correlation function in this limit are discussed and compared to
earlier results obtained for systems with homogeneous substrate
An alternative approach to the construction of Schur-Weyl transform
We propose an alternative approach for the construction of the unitary matrix
which performs generalized unitary rotations of the system consisting of
independent identical subsystems (for example spin system). This matrix, when
applied to the system, results in a change of degrees of freedom, uncovering
the information hidden in non-local degrees of freedom. This information can be
used, inter alia, to study the structure of entangled states, their
classification and may be useful for construction of quantum algorithms.Comment: 6 page
Quantum interface unbinding transitions
We consider interfacial phenomena accompanying bulk quantum phase transitions
in presence of surface fields. On general grounds we argue that the surface
contribution to the system free energy involves a line of singularities
characteristic of an interfacial phase transition, occurring below the bulk
transition temperature T_c down to T=0. This implies the occurrence of an
interfacial quantum critical regime extending into finite temperatures and
located within the portion of the phase diagram where the bulk is ordered. Even
in situations, where the bulk order sets in discontinuously at T=0, the
system's behavior at the boundary may be controlled by a divergent length scale
if the tricritical temperature is sufficiently low. Relying on an effective
interfacial model we compute the surface phase diagram in bulk spatial
dimensionality and extract the values of the exponents describing the
interfacial singularities in
- …