206 research outputs found
Fluctuation-Driven 1st-Order Isotropic-to-Tetrahedratic Phase Transition
Motivated in part by recent experiments on liquid crystals with bent-core
molecules, which are observed to display a spontaneous chiral symmetry
breaking, we introduce a field theory of a 3rd-rank tensor order parameter
T^{ijk} to describe the isotropic-to-tetrahedratic phase transition that we
predict to take place in these materials. We study the critical properties of
the corresponding phase transition and find that this transition, continuous at
the mean-field level, is generically driven 1st-order by thermal fluctuations.Comment: 4 pgs. RevTex, 2 eps figures, submitted to Europhysics Letter
A Discotic Disguised as a Smectic: A Hybrid Columnar Bragg Glass
We show that discotics, lying deep in the columnar phase, can exhibit an
x-ray scattering pattern which mimics that of a somewhat unusual smectic liquid
crystal. This exotic, new glassy phase of columnar liquid crystals, which we
call a ``hybrid columnar Bragg glass'', can be achieved by confining a columnar
liquid crystal in an anisotropic random environment of e.g., strained aerogel.
Long-ranged orientational order in this phase makes {\em single domain} x-ray
scattering possible, from which a wealth of information could be extracted. We
give detailed quantitative predictions for the scattering pattern in addition
to exponents characterizing anomalous elasticity of the system.Comment: 4 RevTeX pgs, 2 eps figures. To appear in PR
Two new topologically ordered glass phases of smectics confined in anisotropic random media
We show that smectic liquid crystals confined in_anisotropic_ porous
structures such as e.g.,_strained_ aerogel or aerosil exhibit two new glassy
phases. The strain both ensures the stability of these phases and determines
their nature. One type of strain induces an ``XY Bragg glass'', while the other
creates a novel, triaxially anisotropic ``m=1 Bragg glass''. The latter
exhibits anomalous elasticity, characterized by exponents that we calculate to
high precision. We predict the phase diagram for the system, and numerous other
experimental observables.Comment: 4 RevTeX pgs, 2 eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Phases and Transitions in Phantom Nematic Elastomer Membranes
Motivated by recently discovered unusual properties of bulk nematic
elastomers, we study a phase diagram of liquid-crystalline polymerized phantom
membranes, focusing on in-plane nematic order. We predict that such membranes
should enerically exhibit five phases, distinguished by their conformational
and in-plane orientational properties, namely isotropic-crumpled,
nematic-crumpled, isotropic-flat, nematic-flat and nematic-tubule phases. In
the nematic-tubule phase, the membrane is extended along the direction of {\em
spontaneous} nematic order and is crumpled in the other. The associated
spontaneous symmetries breaking guarantees that the nematic-tubule is
characterized by a conformational-orientational soft (Goldstone) mode and the
concomitant vanishing of the in-plane shear modulus. We show that long-range
orientational order of the nematic-tubule is maintained even in the presence of
harmonic thermal luctuations. However, it is likely that tubule's elastic
properties are ualitatively modified by these fluctuations, that can be studied
using a nonlinear elastic theory for the nematic tubule phase that we derive at
the end of this paper.Comment: 12 pages, 4 eps figures. To appear in PR
Elasticity, fluctuations and vortex pinning in ferromagnetic superconductors: A "columnar elastic glass"
We study the elasticity, fluctuations and pinning of a putative spontaneous
vortex solid in ferromagnetic superconductors. Using a rigorous thermodynamic
argument, we show that in the idealized case of vanishing crystalline pinning
anisotropy the long-wavelength tilt modulus of such a vortex solid vanishes
identically, as guaranteed by the underlying rotational invariance. The
vanishing of the tilt modulus means that, to lowest order, the associated
tension elasticity is replaced by the softer, curvature elasticity. The effect
of this is to make the spontaneous vortex solid qualitatively more susceptible
to the disordering effects of thermal fluctuations and random pinning. We study
these effects, taking into account the nonlinear elasticity, that, in three
dimensions, is important at sufficiently long length scales, and showing that a
``columnar elastic glass'' phase of vortices results. This phase is controlled
by a previously unstudied zero-temperature fixed point and it is characterized
by elastic moduli that have universal strong wave-vector dependence out to
arbitrarily long length scales, leading to non-Hookean elasticity. We argue
that, although translationally disordered for weak disorder, the columnar
elastic glass is stable against the proliferation of dislocations and is
therefore a topologically ordered {\em elastic} glass. As a result, the
phenomenology of the spontaneous vortex state of isotropic magnetic
superconductors differs qualitatively from a conventional,
external-field-induced mixed state. For example, for weak external fields ,
the magnetic induction scales {\em universally} like , with .Comment: Minor editorial changes, version to be published in PRB, 39 pages, 7
figure
Self-Consistent Theory of Normal-to-Superconducting Transition
I study the normal-to-superconducting (NS) transition within the
Ginzburg-Landau (GL) model, taking into account the fluctuations in the
-component complex order parameter \psi\a and the vector potential in the arbitrary dimension , for any . I find that the transition is
of second-order and that the previous conclusion of the fluctuation-driven
first-order transition is an artifact of the breakdown of the \eps-expansion
and the inaccuracy of the -expansion for physical values \eps=1, .
I compute the anomalous exponent at the NS transition, and find
. In the limit, becomes exact
and agrees with the -expansion. Near the theory is also in good
agreement with the perturbative \eps-expansion results for and
provides a sensible interpolation formula for arbitrary and .Comment: 9 pages, TeX + harvmac.tex (included), 2 figures and hard copies are
available from [email protected] To appear in Europhysics Letters,
January, 199
Fluctuating Nematic Elastomer Membranes: a New Universality Class
We study the flat phase of nematic elastomer membranes with rotational
symmetry spontaneously broken by in-plane nematic order. Such state is
characterized by a vanishing elastic modulus for simple shear and soft
transverse phonons. At harmonic level, in-plane orientational (nematic) order
is stable to thermal fluctuations, that lead to short-range in-plane
translational (phonon) correlations. To treat thermal fluctuations and relevant
elastic nonlinearities, we introduce two generalizations of two-dimensional
membranes in a three dimensional space to arbitrary D-dimensional membranes
embedded in a d-dimensional space, and analyze their anomalous elasticities in
an expansion about D=4. We find a new stable fixed point, that controls
long-scale properties of nematic elastomer membranes. It is characterized by
singular in-plane elastic moduli that vanish as a power-law eta_lambda=4-D of a
relevant inverse length scale (e.g., wavevector) and a finite bending rigidity.
Our predictions are asymptotically exact near 4 dimensions.Comment: 18 pages, 4 eps figures. submitted to PR
Quantum phase transitions across p-wave Feshbach resonance
We study a single-species polarized Fermi gas tuned across a narrow p-wave
Feshbach resonance. We show that in the course of a BEC-BCS crossover the
system can undergo a magnetic field-tuned quantum phase transition from a
p_x-wave to a p_x+i p_y-wave superfluid. The latter state, that spontaneously
breaks time-reversal symmetry, furthermore undergoes a topological p_x+ i p_y
to p_x+ i p_y transition at zero chemical potential \mu. In two-dimensions, for
\mu>0 it is characterized by a Pfaffian ground state exhibiting topological
order and non-Abelian excitations familiar from fractional quantum Hall
systems.Comment: Fig. 1(a) changed to reflect a correction of a mistake in the
previous version of the manuscript. We credit Chi-Ho Cheng and S.-K. Yip,
cond-mat/0504278, for this correction (see Note Added for details
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