5,892 research outputs found
Collective modes and sound propagation in a p-wave superconductor: SrRuO
There are five distinct collective modes in the recently discovered p-wave
superconductor SrRuO; phase and amplitude modes of the order parameter,
clapping mode (real and imaginary), and spin wave. The first two modes also
exist in the ordinary s-wave superconductors, while the clapping mode with the
energy is unique to SrRuO and couples to the sound
wave. Here we report a theoretical study of the sound propagation in a two
dimensional p-wave superconductor. We identified the clapping mode and study
its effects on the longitudinal and transverse sound velocities in the
superconducting state. In contrast to the case of He, there is no resonance
absorption associated with the collective mode, since in metals , where is the Fermi velocity, {\bf q} is the wave
vector, and is the frequency of the sound wave. However, the velocity
change in the collisionless limit gets modified by the contribution from the
coupling to the clapping mode. We compute this contribution and comment on the
visibility of the effect. In the diffusive limit, the contribution from the
collective mode turns out to be negligible. The behaviors of the sound velocity
change and the attenuation coefficient near in the diffusive limit are
calculated and compared with the existing experimental data wherever it is
possible. We also present the results for the attenuation coefficients in both
of the collisionless and diffusive limits at finite temperatures.Comment: RevTex, 12 pages, 2 figures, Replaced by the published versio
Molecular connections between nuclear and ciliary import processes
Abstract
As an organelle, the cilium contains a unique complement of protein and lipid. Recent work has begun to shed light on the mechanisms that regulate entry of ciliary proteins into the compartment. Here, we focus on the mechanisms that regulate ciliary entry of cytosolic molecules. Studies have revealed a size exclusion mechanism for ciliary entry that is similar to the barrier to nuclear entry. Active import into the ciliary compartment involves nuclear trafficking components including importins, a Ran-guanosine triphosphate gradient, and nucleoporins. Together, this work indicates that nuclei and cilia share molecular, structural and mechanistic components that regulate import into the compartments.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134547/1/13630_2013_Article_193.pd
Signatures of Electronic Nematic Phase at Isotropic-Nematic Phase Transition
The electronic nematic phase occurs when the point-group symmetry of the
lattice structure is broken, due to electron-electron interactions. We study a
model for the nematic phase on a square lattice with emphasis on the phase
transition between isotropic and nematic phases within mean field theory. We
find the transition to be first order, with dramatic changes in the Fermi
surface topology accompanying the transition. Furthermore, we study the
conductivity tensor and Hall constant as probes of the nematic phase and its
transition. The relevance of our findings to Hall resistivity experiments in
the high- cuprates is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dispersive Gap Mode of Phonons in Anisotropic Superconductors
We estimate the effect of the superconducting gap anisotropy in the
dispersive gap mode of phonons, which is observed by the neutron scattering on
borocarbide superconductors. We numerically analyze the phonon spectrum
considering the electron-phonon coupling, and examine contributions coming from
the gap suppression and the sign change of the pairing function on the Fermi
surface. When the sign of the pairing function is changed by the nesting
translation, the gap mode does not appear. We also discuss the suppression of
the phonon softening of the Kohn anomaly due to the onset of superconductivity.
We demonstrate that observation of the gap dispersive mode is useful for
sorting out the underlying superconducting pairing function.Comment: 7 pages, 12 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Fermi liquid near Pomeranchuk quantum criticality
We analyze the behavior of an itinerant Fermi system near a charge
nematic(n=2) Pomeranchuk instability in terms of the Landau Fermi liquid (FL)
theory. The main object of our study is the fully renormalized vertex function
, related to the Landau interaction function. We derive
for a model case of the long-range interaction in the nematic
channel. Already within the Random Phase Approximation (RPA), the vertex is
singular near the instability. The full vertex, obtained by resumming the
ladder series composed of the RPA vertices, differs from the RPA result by a
multiplicative renormalization factor , related to the
single-particle residue and effective mass renormalization . We
employ the Pitaevski-Landau identities, which express the derivatives of the
self-energy in terms of , to obtain and solve a set of coupled
non-linear equations for , , and . We show that near the
transition the system enters a critical FL regime, where and , where is the
charge Landau component which approaches -1 at the instability. We
construct the Landau function of the critical FL and show that all but
Landau components diverge at the critical point. We also show that in
the critical regime the one-loop result for the self-energy is asymptotically exact if one identifies the effective
interaction with the RPA form of .Comment: References added, discussion of the dynamic vertex is modifie
Analytic, dust-independent mass-loss rates for red supergiant winds initiated by turbulent pressure
Context. Red supergiants are observed to undergo vigorous mass-loss. However,
to date, no theoretical model has succeeded in explaining the origins of these
objects' winds. This strongly limits our understanding of red supergiant
evolution and Type II-P and II-L supernova progenitor properties.
Aims. We examine the role that vigorous atmospheric turbulence may play in
initiating and determining the mass-loss rates of red supergiant stars.
Methods. We analytically and numerically solve the equations of conservation
of mass and momentum, which we later couple to an atmospheric temperature
structure, to obtain theoretically motivated mass-loss rates. We then compare
these to state-of-the-art empirical mass-loss rate scaling formulae as well as
observationally inferred mass-loss rates of red supergiants.
Results. We find that the pressure due to the characteristic turbulent
velocities inferred for red supergiants is sufficient to explain the mass-loss
rates of these objects in the absence of the normally employed opacity from
circumstellar dust. Motivated by this initial success, we provide a first
theoretical and fully analytic mass-loss rate prescription for red supergiants.
We conclude by highlighting some intriguing possible implications of these
rates for future studies of stellar evolution, especially in light of the lack
of a direct dependence on metallicity.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 2 table
On Measuring Condensate Fraction in Superconductors
An analysis of off-diagonal long-range order in superconductors shows that
the spin-spin correlation function is significantly influenced by the order if
the order parameter is anisotropic on a microscopic scale. Thus, magnetic
neutron scattering can provide a direct measurement of the condensate fraction
of a superconductor. It is also argued that recent measurements in high
temperature superconductors come very close to achieving this goal.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figure, RevTex. A new possibility in the underdoped
regime is added. Other corrections are mino
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