2,183 research outputs found
A simple topological model with continuous phase transition
In the area of topological and geometric treatment of phase transitions and
symmetry breaking in Hamiltonian systems, in a recent paper some general
sufficient conditions for these phenomena in -symmetric systems
(i.e. invariant under reflection of coordinates) have been found out. In this
paper we present a simple topological model satisfying the above conditions
hoping to enlighten the mechanism which causes this phenomenon in more general
physical models. The symmetry breaking is testified by a continuous
magnetization with a nonanalytic point in correspondence of a critical
temperature which divides the broken symmetry phase from the unbroken one. A
particularity with respect to the common pictures of a phase transition is that
the nonanalyticity of the magnetization is not accompanied by a nonanalytic
behavior of the free energy.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Thermalization of a Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model coupled to a bosonic bath
We derive a Lindblad master equation that approximates the dynamics of a
Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick (LMG) model weakly coupled to a bosonic bath. By studying
the time evolution of operators under the adjoint master equation we prove
that, for large system sizes, these operators attain their thermal equilibrium
expectation values in the long-time limit, and we calculate the rate at which
these values are approached. Integrability of the LMG model prevents
thermalization in the absence of a bath, and our work provides an explicit
proof that the bath indeed restores thermalization. Imposing thermalization on
this otherwise non-thermalizing model outlines an avenue towards probing the
unconventional thermodynamic properties predicted to occur in
ultracold-atom-based realizations of the LMG model.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Interacting electrons in a 2D quantum dot
The exact numerical diagonalization of the Hamiltonian of a 2D circular
quantum dot is performed for 2, 3, and 4 electrons.The results are compared
with those of the perturbation theory.Our numerical results agree reasonably
well for small values of the dimensionles coupling constant \lambda=a\over a_B
where a is the dot radius and a_B is the effective Bohr radius.Exact
diagonalization results are compared with the classical predictions, and they
are found to be almost coincident for large \lambda values. PACS Numbers:
73.20.Dx, 73.61.-rComment: 12 pages, 5 postscript figure
Metastable states and information propagation in a 1D array of locally-coupled bistable cells
We study the effect of metastable states on the relaxation process (and hence
information propagation) in locally coupled and boundary-driven structures. We
first give a general argument to show that metastable states are inevitable
even in the simplest of structures, a wire. At finite temperatures, the
relaxation mechanism is a thermally assisted random walk. The time required to
reach the ground state and its life time are determined by the coupling
parameters. These time scales are studied in a model based on an array of
quantum dots.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Applied Physic
Magnetic shape-memory effects in La2-xSrxCuO4 crystals
The magnetic field affects the motion of electrons and the orientation of
spins in solids, but it is believed to have little impact on the crystal
structure. This common perception has been challenged recently by ferromagnetic
shape-memory alloys, where the spin-lattice coupling is so strong that
crystallographic axes even in a fixed sample are forced to rotate, following
the direction of moments. One would, however, least expect any structural
change to be induced in antiferromagnets where spins are antiparallel and give
no net moment. Here we report on such unexpected magnetic shape-memory effects
that take place ironically in one of the best-studied 2D antiferromagnets,
La2-xSrxCuO4 (LSCO). We find that lightly-doped LSCO crystals tend to align
their b axis along the magnetic field, and if the crystal orientation is fixed,
this alignment occurs through the generation and motion of crystallographic
twin boundaries. Both resistivity and magnetic susceptibility exhibit curious
switching and memory effects induced by the crystal-axes rotation; moreover,
clear kinks moving over the crystal surfaces allow one to watch the crystal
rearrangement directly with a microscope or even bare eyes.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures; shortend version of this paper has been published
in Nature as a Brief Communicatio
Measurements of quasi-particle tunneling in the nu = 5/2 fractional quantum Hall state
Some models of the 5/2 fractional quantum Hall state predict that the
quasi-particles, which carry the charge, have non-Abelian statistics: exchange
of two quasi-particles changes the wave function more dramatically than just
the usual change of phase factor. Such non-Abelian statistics would make the
system less sensitive to decoherence, making it a candidate for implementation
of topological quantum computation. We measure quasi-particle tunneling as a
function of temperature and DC bias between counter-propagating edge states.
Fits to theory give e*, the quasi-particle effective charge, close to the
expected value of e/4 and g, the strength of the interaction between
quasi-particles, close to 3/8. Fits corresponding to the various proposed wave
functions, along with qualitative features of the data, strongly favor the
Abelian 331 state
Transport properties of annealed CdSe nanocrystal solids
Transport properties of artificial solids composed of colloidal CdSe
nanocrystals (NCs) are studied from 6 K to 250 K, before and after annealing.
Annealing results in greatly enhanced dark and photocurrent in NC solids, while
transmission electron microscopy (TEM) micrographs show that the inter-dot
separation decreases. The increased current can be attributed to the
enhancement of inter-dot tunneling caused by the decreased separation between
NCs and by chemical changes in their organic cap. In addition, the absorption
spectra of annealed solids are slightly red-shifted and broadened. These
red-shifts may result from the change of the dielectric environment around the
NCs. Our measurements also indicate that Coulomb interactions between charges
on neighboring NCs play an important role in the tunneling current.Comment: 24 pages,4 figures, 1 tabl
Equilibration of isolated macroscopic quantum systems
We investigate the equilibration of an isolated macroscopic quantum system in
the sense that deviations from a steady state become unmeasurably small for the
overwhelming majority of times within any sufficiently large time interval. The
main requirements are that the initial state, possibly far from equilibrium,
exhibits a macroscopic population of at most one energy level and that
degeneracies of energy eigenvalues and of energy gaps (differences of energy
eigenvalues) are not of exceedingly large multiplicities. Our approach closely
follows and extends recent works by Short and Farrelly [2012 New J. Phys. 14
013063], in particular going beyond the realm of finite-dimensional systems and
large effective dimensions.Comment: 19 page
Imaging the charge transport in arrays of CdSe nanocrystals
A novel method to image charge is used to measure the diffusion coefficient
of electrons in films of CdSe nanocrystals at room temperature. This method
makes possible the study of charge transport in films exhibiting high
resistances or very small diffusion coefficients.Comment: 4 pages, 4 jpg figure
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