3,389 research outputs found

    Low-Temperature Excitations of Dilute Lattice Spin Glasses

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    A new approach to exploring low-temperature excitations in finite-dimensional lattice spin glasses is proposed. By focusing on bond-diluted lattices just above the percolation threshold, large system sizes LL can be obtained which lead to enhanced scaling regimes and more accurate exponents. Furthermore, this method in principle remains practical for any dimension, yielding exponents that so far have been elusive. This approach is demonstrated by determining the stiffness exponent for dimensions d=3d=3, d=6d=6 (the upper critical dimension), and d=7d=7. Key is the application of an exact reduction algorithm, which eliminates a large fraction of spins, so that the reduced lattices never exceed ∼103\sim10^3 variables for sizes as large as L=30 in d=3d=3, L=9 in d=6d=6, or L=8 in d=7d=7. Finite size scaling analysis gives y3=0.24(1)y_3=0.24(1) for d=3d=3, significantly improving on previous work. The results for d=6d=6 and d=7d=7, y6=1.1(1)y_6=1.1(1) and y7=1.24(5)y_7=1.24(5), are entirely new and are compared with mean-field predictions made for d>=6.Comment: 7 pages, LaTex, 7 ps-figures included, added result for stiffness in d=7, as to appear in Europhysics Letters (see http://www.physics.emory.edu/faculty/boettcher/ for related information

    Direct perturbation theory on the shift of Electron Spin Resonance

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    We formulate a direct and systematic perturbation theory on the shift of the main paramagnetic peak in Electron Spin Resonance, and derive a general expression up to second order. It is applied to one-dimensional XXZ and transverse Ising models in the high field limit, to obtain explicit results including the polarization dependence for arbitrary temperature.Comment: 5 pages (no figures) in REVTE

    Finite-Size Scaling of the Domain Wall Entropy Distributions for the 2D ±J\pm J Ising Spin Glass

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    The statistics of domain walls for ground states of the 2D Ising spin glass with +1 and -1 bonds are studied for L×LL \times L square lattices with L≤48L \le 48, and pp = 0.5, where pp is the fraction of negative bonds, using periodic and/or antiperiodic boundary conditions. When LL is even, almost all domain walls have energy EdwE_{dw} = 0 or 4. When LL is odd, most domain walls have EdwE_{dw} = 2. The probability distribution of the entropy, SdwS_{dw}, is found to depend strongly on EdwE_{dw}. When Edw=0E_{dw} = 0, the probability distribution of ∣Sdw∣|S_{dw}| is approximately exponential. The variance of this distribution is proportional to LL, in agreement with the results of Saul and Kardar. For Edw=k>0E_{dw} = k > 0 the distribution of SdwS_{dw} is not symmetric about zero. In these cases the variance still appears to be linear in LL, but the average of SdwS_{dw} grows faster than L\sqrt{L}. This suggests a one-parameter scaling form for the LL-dependence of the distributions of SdwS_{dw} for k>0k > 0.Comment: 13 page

    Random Fixed Point of Three-Dimensional Random-Bond Ising Models

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    The fixed-point structure of three-dimensional bond-disordered Ising models is investigated using the numerical domain-wall renormalization-group method. It is found that, in the +/-J Ising model, there exists a non-trivial fixed point along the phase boundary between the paramagnetic and ferromagnetic phases. The fixed-point Hamiltonian of the +/-J model numerically coincides with that of the unfrustrated random Ising models, strongly suggesting that both belong to the same universality class. Another fixed point corresponding to the multicritical point is also found in the +/-J model. Critical properties associated with the fixed point are qualitatively consistent with theoretical predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Journal of the Physical Society of Japa

    On the Use of Finite-Size Scaling to Measure Spin-Glass Exponents

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    Finite-size scaling (FSS) is a standard technique for measuring scaling exponents in spin glasses. Here we present a critique of this approach, emphasizing the need for all length scales to be large compared to microscopic scales. In particular we show that the replacement, in FSS analyses, of the correlation length by its asymptotic scaling form can lead to apparently good scaling collapses with the wrong values of the scaling exponents.Comment: RevTeX, 5 page

    Statistics of lowest excitations in two dimensional Gaussian spin glasses

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    A detailed investigation of lowest excitations in two-dimensional Gaussian spin glasses is presented. We show the existence of a new zero-temperature exponent lambda describing the relative number of finite-volume excitations with respect to large-scale ones. This exponent yields the standard thermal exponent of droplet theory theta through the relation, theta=d(lambda-1). Our work provides a new way to measure the thermal exponent theta without any assumption about the procedure to generate typical low-lying excitations. We find clear evidence that theta < theta_{DW} where theta_{DW} is the thermal exponent obtained in domain-wall theory showing that MacMillan excitations are not typical.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, (v2) revised version, (v3) corrected typo

    Evidence for existence of many pure ground states in 3d ±J\pm J Spin Glasses

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    Ground states of 3d EA Ising spin glasses are calculated for sizes up to 14314^3 using a combination of genetic algorithms and cluster-exact approximation . The distribution P(∣q∣)P(|q|) of overlaps is calculated. For increasing size the width of P(∣q∣)P(|q|) converges to a nonzero value, indicating that many pure ground states exist for short range Ising spin glasses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, 16 reference

    Isotropic, Nematic and Smectic A Phase Behaviour in a Fictitious Field

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    Phase behaviours of liquid crystals under external fields, conjugate to the nematic order and smectic order, are studied within the framework of mean field approximation developed by McMillan. It is found that phase diagrams, of temperature vs interaction parameter of smectic A order, show several topologically different types caused by the external fields. The influences of the field conjugate to the smectic A phase, which is fictitious field, are precisely discussed.Comment: To be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. vol.73 No.

    The ground state of a general electron-phonon Hamiltonian is a spin singlet

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    The many-body ground state of a very general class of electron-phonon Hamiltonians is proven to contain a spin singlet (for an even number of electrons on a finite lattice). The phonons interact with the electronic system in two different ways---there is an interaction with the local electronic charge and there is a functional dependence of the electronic hopping Hamiltonian on the phonon coordinates. The phonon potential energy may include anharmonic terms, and the electron-phonon couplings and the hopping matrix elements may be nonlinear functions of the phonon coordinates. If the hopping Hamiltonian is assumed to have no phonon coordinate dependence, then the ground state is also shown to be unique, implying that there are no ground-state level crossings, and that the ground-state energy is an analytic function of the parameters in the Hamiltonian. In particular, in a finite system any self-trapping transition is a smooth crossover not accompanied by a nonanalytical change in the ground state. The spin-singlet theorem applies to the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model and both the spin-singlet and uniqueness theorems apply to the Holstein and attractive Hubbard models as special cases. These results hold in all dimensions --- even on a general graph without periodic lattice structure.Comment: 25 pages, no figures, plainte

    Fermi surface of the filled-skutterudite superconductor LaRu4P12: A clue to the origin of the metal-insulator transition in PrRu4P12

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    We report the de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect and magnetoresistance in the filled-skutterudite superconductor LaRu4P12, which is a reference material of PrRu4P12 that exhibits a metal-insulator (M-I) transition at T_MI~60 K. The observed dHvA branches for the main Fermi surface (FS) are well explained by the band-structure calculation, using the full potential linearized augmented-plane-wave method with the local-density approximation, suggesting a nesting instability with q =(1,0,0) in the main multiply connected FS as expected also in PrRu4P12. Observed cyclotron effective masses of (2.6-11.8)m_0, which are roughly twice the calculated masses, indicate the large mass enhancement even in the La-skutterudites. Comparing the FS between LaRu4P12 and PrRu4P12, an essential role of c-f hybridization cooperating with the FS nesting in driving the the M-I transition in PrRu4P12 has been clarified.Comment: Appeared in Physical Review
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