17,896 research outputs found
Renormalization Group and Conformal Symmetry Breaking in the Chern-Simons Theory Coupled to Matter
The three-dimensional Abelian Chern-Simons theory coupled to a scalar and a
fermionic field of arbitrary charge is considered in order to study conformal
symmetry breakdown and the effective potential stability. We present an
improved effective potential computation based on two-loop calculations and the
renormalization group equation: the later allows us to sum up series of terms
in the effective potential where the power of the logarithms are one, two and
three units smaller than the total power of coupling constants (i.e., leading,
next-to-leading and next-to-next-to-leading logarithms). For the sake of this
calculation we determined the beta function of the
fermion-fermion-scalar-scalar interaction and the anomalous dimension of the
scalar field. We shown that the improved effective potential provides a much
more precise determination of the properties of the theory in the broken phase,
compared to the standard effective potential obtained directly from the loop
calculations. This happens because the region of the parameter space where
dynamical symmetry breaking occurs is drastically reduced by the improvement
discussed here.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Mechanism of magnetostructural transformation in multifunctional MnGaC
MnGaC undergoes a ferromagnetic to antiferromagnetic, volume
discontinuous cubic-cubic phase transition as a function of temperature,
pressure and magnetic field. Through a series of temperature dependent x-ray
absorption fine structure spectroscopy experiments at the Mn K and Ga K edge,
it is shown that the first order magnetic transformation in MnGaC is
entirely due to distortions in Mn sub-lattice and with a very little role for
Mn-C interactions. The distortion in Mn sub-lattice results in long and short
Mn-Mn bonds with the longer Mn-Mn bonds favoring ferromagnetic interactions and
the shorter Mn-Mn bonds favoring antiferromagnetic interactions. At the first
order transition, the shorter Mn-Mn bonds exhibit an abrupt decrease in their
length resulting in an antiferromagnetic ground state and a strained lattice.Comment: Accepted in J. Appl. Phys. Please contact authors for supplementary
informatio
Resistivity and Thermopower of Ni2.19Mn0.81Ga
In this paper, we report results of the first studies on the thermoelectric
power (TEP) of the magnetic heusler alloy NiMnGa. We explain
the observed temperature dependence of the TEP in terms of the crystal field
(CF) splitting and compare the observed behavior to that of the stoichiometric
system NiMnGa. The resistivity as a function of temperature of the two
systems serves to define the structural transition temperature, T, which is
the transition from the high temperature austenitic phase to low temperatures
the martensitic phase. Occurrence of magnetic (Curie-Weiss) and the martensitic
transition at almost the same temperature in NiMnGa has been
explained from TEP to be due to changes in the density of states (DOS) at the
Fermi level.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, Accepted in Physical Review B vol 70, Issue 1
Local Runup Amplification By Resonant Wave Interactions
Until now the analysis of long wave runup on a plane beach has been focused
on finding its maximum value, failing to capture the existence of resonant
regimes. One-dimensional numerical simulations in the framework of the
Nonlinear Shallow Water Equations (NSWE) are used to investigate the Boundary
Value Problem (BVP) for plane and non-trivial beaches. Monochromatic waves, as
well as virtual wave-gage recordings from real tsunami simulations, are used as
forcing conditions to the BVP. Resonant phenomena between the incident
wavelength and the beach slope are found to occur, which result in enhanced
runup of non-leading waves. The evolution of energy reveals the existence of a
quasi-periodic state for the case of sinusoidal waves, the energy level of
which, as well as the time required to reach that state, depend on the incident
wavelength for a given beach slope. Dispersion is found to slightly reduce the
value of maximum runup, but not to change the overall picture. Runup
amplification occurs for both leading elevation and depression waves.Comment: 10 pages, 7 Figures. Accepted to Physical Review Letters. Other
author's papers can be downloaded at http://www.lama.univ-savoie.fr/~dutykh
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