127 research outputs found
Polarization fluctuations in insulators and metals: New and old theories merge
The ground-state fluctuation of polarization P is finite in insulators and
divergent in metals, owing to the SWM sum rule [I. Souza, T. Wilkens, and R. M.
Martin, Phys. Rev. B 62, 1666 (2000)]. This is a virtue of periodic (i.e.
transverse) BCs. I show that within any other boundary conditions the P
fluctuation is finite even in metals, and a generalized sum rule applies. The
boundary-condition dependence is a pure correlation effect, not present at the
independent-particle level. In the longitudinal case div P = -rho, and one
equivalently addresses charge fluctuations: the generalized sum rule reduces
then to a well known result of many-body theory.Comment: 4 pages, no figur
Optical absorption and activated transport in polaronic systems
We present exact results for the optical response in the one-dimensional
Holstein model. In particular, by means of a refined kernel polynomial method,
we calculate the ac and dc electrical conductivities at finite temperatures for
a wide parameter range of electron phonon interaction. We analyze the
deviations from the results of standard small polaron theory in the
intermediate coupling regime and discuss non-adiabaticity effects in detail.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
London's limit for the lattice superconductor
A stability problem for the current state of the strong coupling
superconductor has been considered within the lattice Ginzburg-Landau model.
The critical current problem for a thin superconductor film is solved within
the London limit taking into account the crystal lattice symmetry. The current
dependence on the order parameter modulus is computed for the superconductor
film for various coupling parameter magnitudes. The field penetration problem
is shown to be described in this case by the one-dimensional sine-Gordon
equation. The field distribution around the vortex is described at the same
time by the two-dimensional elliptic sine-Gordon equation.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Revtex4, mostly technical correction; extended
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Electron Localization in the Insulating State
The insulating state of matter is characterized by the excitation spectrum,
but also by qualitative features of the electronic ground state. The insulating
ground wavefunction in fact: (i) sustains macroscopic polarization, and (ii) is
localized. We give a sharp definition of the latter concept, and we show how
the two basic features stem from essentially the same formalism. Our approach
to localization is exemplified by means of a two--band Hubbard model in one
dimension. In the noninteracting limit the wavefunction localization is
measured by the spread of the Wannier orbitals.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures, submitted to PR
Comment on `Dynamical properties of small polarons'
We show that the conclusion on the breakdown of the standard small polaron
theory made recently by E.V. deMello and J. Ranninger (Phys. Rev. B 55, 14872
(1997)) is a result of an incorrect interpretation of the electronic and
vibronic energy levels of the two-site Holstein model. The small polaron
theory, when properly applied, agrees well with the numerical results of these
authors. Also we show that their attempt to connect the properties of the
calculated correlation functions with the features of the intersite electron
hopping is unsuccessful.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.
Characterization of two-dimensional fermionic insulating states
Inspired by the duality picture between superconductivity and insulator in
two spatial dimension, we conjecture that the order parameter, suitable for
characterizing 2D fermionic insulating state, is the disorder operator, usually
known in the context of statistical transformation. Namely, the change of the
phase of the disorder operator along a closed loop measures the particle
density accommodating inside this loop. Thus, identifying this (doped) particle
density with the dual counterpart of the magnetic induction in 2D SC, we can
naturally introduce the disorder operator as the dual order parameter of 2D
insulators. The disorder operator has a branch cut emitting from this
``vortex'' to the single infinitely far point. To test this conjecture against
an arbitrary 2D lattice models, we have chosen this branch cut to be compatible
with the periodic boundary condition and obtain a general form of its
expectation value for non-interacting metal/insulator wavefunction, including
gapped mean-field order wavefunction. Based on this expression, we observed
analytically that it indeed vanishes for a wide class of band metals in the
thermodynamic limit. In insulating states, on the other hand, it is quantified
by the localization length or the real-valued gauge invariant 2-from dubbed as
the quantum metric tensor
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