912 research outputs found
Non-equilibrium electronic transport in a one-dimensional Mott insulator
We calculate the non-equilibrium electronic transport properties of a
one-dimensional interacting chain at half filling, coupled to non-interacting
leads. The interacting chain is initially in a Mott insulator state that is
driven out of equilibrium by applying a strong bias voltage between the leads.
For bias voltages above a certain threshold we observe the breakdown of the
Mott insulator state and the establishment of a steady-state electronic current
through the system. Based on extensive time-dependent density matrix
renormalization group simulations, we show that this steady-state current
always has the same functional dependence on voltage, independent of the
microscopic details of the model and relate the value of the threshold to the
Lieb-Wu gap. We frame our results in terms of the Landau-Zener dielectric
breakdown picture. Finally, we also discuss the real-time evolution of the
current, and characterize the current-carrying state resulting from the
breakdown of the Mott insulator by computing the double occupancy, the spin
structure factor, and the entanglement entropy.Comment: 12 pages RevTex4, 12 eps figures, as published, minor revision
Quantum and thermal fluctuations in the SU(N) Heisenberg spin-glass model near the quantum critical point
We solve for the SU(N) Heisenberg spin-glass in the limit of large N focusing
on small S and T. We study the effect of quantum and thermal fluctuations in
the frequency dependent response function and observed interesting transfers of
spectral weight. We compute the T-dependence of the order parameter and the
specific heat and find an unusual T^2 behavior for the latter at low
temperatures in the spin-glass phase. We find a remarkable qualitative
agreement with various experiments on the quantum frustrated magnet
SrCr_{9p}Ga_{12-9p}O_{19}.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Magnetic Transition Temperature of (La,Sr)MnO
Using the Kondo lattice model with classical spins in infinite dimension,
magnetic phase transition in the perovskite-type transition-metal oxide
(La,Sr)MnO is theoretically studied. On the Bethe lattice, the
self-consistency equations are solved exactly. Curie temperatures at the region
of double-exchange ferromagnetism as well as the Neel
temperature at are well reproduced quantitatively. Pressure effect on the
Curie temperature is also discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 PS file with 3 figures appended at the end, LaTe
On insertion-deletion systems over relational words
We introduce a new notion of a relational word as a finite totally ordered
set of positions endowed with three binary relations that describe which
positions are labeled by equal data, by unequal data and those having an
undefined relation between their labels. We define the operations of insertion
and deletion on relational words generalizing corresponding operations on
strings. We prove that the transitive and reflexive closure of these operations
has a decidable membership problem for the case of short insertion-deletion
rules (of size two/three and three/two). At the same time, we show that in the
general case such systems can produce a coding of any recursively enumerable
language leading to undecidabilty of reachability questions.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
The infinite-range quantum random Heisenberg magnet
We study with exact diagonalization techniques the Heisenberg model for a
system of SU(2) spins with S=1/2 and random infinite-range exchange
interactions. We calculate the critical temperature T_g for the spin-glass to
paramagnetic transition. We obtain T_g ~ 0.13, in good agreement with previous
quantum Monte Carlo and analytical estimates. We provide a detailed picture for
the different kind of excitations which intervene in the dynamical response
chi''(w,T) at T=0 and analyze their evolution as T increases. We also calculate
the specific heat Cv(T). We find that it displays a smooth maximum at TM ~
0.25, in good qualitative agreement with experiments. We argue that the fact
that TM>Tg is due to a quantum disorder effect.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figure
Effect of Particle-Hole Asymmetry on the Mott-Hubbard Metal-Insulator Transition
The Mott-Hubbard metal-insulator transition is one of the most important
problems in correlated electron systems. In the past decade, much progress has
been made on examining a particle-hole symmetric form of the transition in the
Hubbard model with dynamical mean field theory where it was found that the
electronic self energy develops a pole at the transition. We examine the
particle-hole asymmetric metal-insulator transition in the Falicov-Kimball
model, and find that a number of features change when the noninteracting
density of states has a finite bandwidth. Since, generically particle-hole
symmetry is broken in real materials, our results have an impact on
understanding the metal-insulator transition in real materials.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Band-width control in a perovskite-type 3d^1 correlated metal Ca_1-xSr_xVO_3. II. Optical spectroscopy investigation
Optical conductivity spectra of single crystals of Ca_1-xSr_xVO_3 have been
studied to elucidate how the electronic behavior depends on the strength of the
electron correlation without changing the nominal number of electrons per
vanadium atom. The effective mass deduced by the analysis of the Drude-like
contribution do not show critical enhancement, even though the system is close
to the Mott transition. Besides the Drude-like contribution, two anomalous
features were observed in the optical conductivity spectra of the intraband
transition within the 3d band. These features can be assigned to transitions
involving the incoherent and coherent bands near the Fermi level. The large
spectral weight redistribution in this system, however, does not involve a
large mass enhancement.Comment: 12 pages in a Phys. Rev. B camera-ready format with 16 EPS figures
embedded. LaTeX 2.09 source file using "camera.sty" and "prbplug.sty"
provided by N. Shirakawa. For OzTeX (Macintosh), use "ozfig.sty" instead of
"psfig.sty". "ozfig.sty" can be also obtained by e-mail request to N.
Shirakawa: . Submitted to Phys. Rev. B. See "Part I (by
Inoue et al.)" at cond-mat/980107
A new proof for the decidability of D0L ultimate periodicity
We give a new proof for the decidability of the D0L ultimate periodicity
problem based on the decidability of p-periodicity of morphic words adapted to
the approach of Harju and Linna.Comment: In Proceedings WORDS 2011, arXiv:1108.341
Typical-Medium Theory of Mott-Anderson Localization
The Mott and the Anderson routes to localization have long been recognized as
the two basic processes that can drive the metal-insulator transition (MIT).
Theories separately describing each of these mechanisms were discussed long
ago, but an accepted approach that can include both has remained elusive. The
lack of any obvious static symmetry distinguishing the metal from the insulator
poses another fundamental problem, since an appropriate static order parameter
cannot be easily found. More recent work, however, has revisited the original
arguments of Anderson and Mott, which stressed that the key diference between
the metal end the insulator lies in the dynamics of the electron. This physical
picture has suggested that the "typical" (geometrically averaged) escape rate
from a given lattice site should be regarded as the proper dynamical order
parameter for the MIT, one that can naturally describe both the Anderson and
the Mott mechanism for localization. This article provides an overview of the
recent results obtained from the corresponding Typical-Medium Theory, which
provided new insight into the the two-fluid character of the Mott-Anderson
transition.Comment: to be published in "Fifty Years of Anderson localization", edited by
E. Abrahams (World Scientific, Singapore, 2010); 29 pages, 22 figures
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