10,353 research outputs found
Two algebraic properties of thermal quantum field theories
We establish the Schlieder and the Borchers property for thermal field
theories. In addition, we provide some information on the commutation and
localization properties of projection operators.Comment: plain tex, 14 page
Electronic structure and resistivity of the double exchange model
The double exchange (DE) model with quantum local spins S is studied; an
equation of motion approach is used and decoupling approximations analogous to
Hubbard's are made. Our approximate one-electron Green function G is exact in
the atomic limit of zero bandwidth for all S and band filling n, and as n->0
reduces to a dynamical coherent potential approximation (CPA) due to Kubo; we
regard our approximation as a many-body generalisation of Kubo's CPA. G is
calculated self-consistently for general S in the paramagnetic state and for
S=1/2 in a state of arbitrary magnetization. The electronic structure is
investigated and four bands per spin are obtained centred on the atomic limit
peaks of the spectral function. A resistivity formula appropriate to the model
is derived from the Kubo formula and the paramagnetic state resistivity rho is
calculated; insulating states are correctly obtained at n=0 and n=1 for strong
Hund coupling. Our prediction for rho is much too small to be consistent with
experiments on manganites so we agree with Millis et al that the bare DE model
is inadequate. We show that the agreement with experiment obtained by Furukawa
is due to his use of an unphysical density of states.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Transient localization in crystalline organic semiconductors
A relation derived from the Kubo formula shows that optical conductivity
measurements below the gap frequency in doped semiconductors can be used to
probe directly the time-dependent quantum dynamics of charge carriers. This
allows to extract fundamental quantities such as the elastic and inelastic
scattering rates, as well as the localization length in disordered systems.
When applied to crystalline organic semiconductors, an incipient electron
localization caused by large dynamical lattice disorder is unveiled, implying a
breakdown of semiclassical transport.Comment: Revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev. B Rapid Communication
Next-to-Leading Order Shear Viscosity in lambda phi^4 Theory
We show that the shear viscosity of lambda phi^4 theory is sensitive at
next-to-leading order to soft physics, which gives rise to subleading
corrections suppressed by only a half power of the coupling, eta = [3033.54 +
1548.3 m_{th}/T] N T^3]/[ (N+2)/3 lambda^2], with m^2_th=(N+2)/72 lambda T^2.
The series appears to converge about as well (or badly) as the series for the
pressure.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Typos fixed, tiny change in discussio
Electronic Transport at Low Temperatures: Diagrammatic Approach
We prove that a diagrammatic evaluation of the Kubo formula for the
electronic transport conductivity due the exchange of bosonic excitations, in
the usual conserving ladder approximation, yields a result consistent with the
Boltzmann equation. In particular, we show that an uncontrolled approximation
that has been used to solve the integral equation for the vertex function is
unnecessary. An exact solution of the integral equation yields the same
asymptotic low-temperature behavior as the approximate one, albeit with a
different prefactor, and agrees with the temperature dependence of the
Boltzmann solution. Examples considered are electron scattering from acoustic
phonons, and from helimagnons in helimagnets.Comment: Submitted to Physics E (FMQT08 Proceedings). Requires Elsevier style
file (included
A statistical mechanics model for free-for-all airplane passenger boarding
I present and discuss a model for the free-for-all passenger boarding which
is employed by some discount air carriers. The model is based on the principles
of statistical mechanics where each seat in the aircraft has an associated
energy which reflects the preferences of the population of air travelers. As
each passenger enters the airplane they select their seats using Boltzmann
statistics, proceed to that location, load their luggage, sit down, and the
partition function seen by remaining passengers is modified to reflect this
fact. I discuss the various model parameters and make qualitative comparisons
of this passenger boarding model with models which involve assigned seats. This
model can also be used to predict the probability that certain seats will be
occupied at different times during the boarding process. These results may be
of value to industry professionals as a useful description of this boarding
method. However, it also has significant value as a pedagogical tool since it
is a relatively unusual application of undergraduate level physics and it
describes a situation with which many students and faculty may be familiar.Comment: version 1: 4 pages 2 figures version 2: 7 pages with 5 figure
Prospects for a mHz-linewidth laser
We propose a new light source based on having alkaline-earth atoms in an
optical lattice collectively emit photons on an ultra-narrow clock transition
into the mode of a high Q-resonator. The resultant optical radiation has an
extremely narrow linewidth in the mHz range, even smaller than that of the
clock transition itself due to collective effects. A power level of order
is possible, sufficient for phase-locking a slave optical local
oscillator. Realizing this light source has the potential to improve the
stability of the best clocks by two orders of magnitude.Comment: minor revisions + shortening; factor 2 algebra mistake correcte
Dynamic Kerr effect responses in the Terahertz-range
Dynamic Kerr effect measurements provide a simple realization of a nonlinear
experiment. We propose a field-off experiment where an electric field of one or
several sinusoidal cycles is applied to a sample in thermal equilibrium.
Afterwards, the evolution of the polarizability is measured. If such an
experiment is performed in the Terahertz-range it might provide valuable
information about the low-frequency dynamics in disordered systems. We treat
these dynamics in terms of a Brownian oscillator model and calculate the Kerr
effect response. It is shown that frequency-selective behaviour can be
expected. In the interesting case of underdamped vibrational motion we find
that the frequency-dependence of the phonon-damping can be determined from the
experiment. Also the behaviour of overdamped relaxational modes is discussed.
For typical glassy materials we estimate the magnitude of all relevant
quantities, which we believe to be helpful in experimental realizations.Comment: 26 pages incl. 5 figure
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