2,166 research outputs found
Two-loop renormalization-group theory for the quasi-one-dimensional Hubbard model at half filling
We derive two-loop renormalization-group equations for the half-filled
one-dimensional Hubbard chains coupled by the interchain hopping. Our
renormalization-group scheme for the quasi-one-dimensional electron system is a
natural extension of that for the purely one-dimensional systems in the sense
that transverse-momentum dependences are introduced in the g-ological coupling
constants and we regard the transverse momentum as a patch index. We develop
symmetry arguments for the particle-hole symmetric half-filled Hubbard model
and obtain constraints on the g-ological coupling constants by which resultant
renormalization equations are given in a compact form. By solving the
renormalization-group equations numerically, we estimate the magnitude of
excitation gaps and clarify that the charge gap is suppressed due to the
interchain hopping but is always finite even for the relevant interchain
hopping. To show the validity of the present analysis, we also apply this to
the two-leg ladder system. By utilizing the field-theoretical bosonization and
fermionization method, we derive low-energy effective theory and analyze the
magnitude of all the excitation gaps in detail. It is shown that the low-energy
excitations in the two-leg Hubbard ladder have SO(3) x SO(3) x U(1) symmetry
when the interchain hopping exceeds the magnitude of the charge gap.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures; Two appendices and one figure adde
Solar Oscillations and Convection: II. Excitation of Radial Oscillations
Solar p-mode oscillations are excited by the work of stochastic,
non-adiabatic, pressure fluctuations on the compressive modes. We evaluate the
expression for the radial mode excitation rate derived by Nordlund and Stein
(Paper I) using numerical simulations of near surface solar convection. We
first apply this expression to the three radial modes of the simulation and
obtain good agreement between the predicted excitation rate and the actual mode
damping rates as determined from their energies and the widths of their
resolved spectral profiles. We then apply this expression for the mode
excitation rate to the solar modes and obtain excellent agreement with the low
l damping rates determined from GOLF data. Excitation occurs close to the
surface, mainly in the intergranular lanes and near the boundaries of granules
(where turbulence and radiative cooling are large). The non-adiabatic pressure
fluctuations near the surface are produced by small instantaneous local
imbalances between the divergence of the radiative and convective fluxes near
the solar surface. Below the surface, the non-adiabatic pressure fluctuations
are produced primarily by turbulent pressure fluctuations (Reynolds stresses).
The frequency dependence of the mode excitation is due to effects of the mode
structure and the pressure fluctuation spectrum. Excitation is small at low
frequencies due to mode properties -- the mode compression decreases and the
mode mass increases at low frequency. Excitation is small at high frequencies
due to the pressure fluctuation spectrum -- pressure fluctuations become small
at high frequencies because they are due to convection which is a long time
scale phenomena compared to the dominant p-mode periods.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (scheduled for Dec 10, 2000 issue).
17 pages, 27 figures, some with reduced resolution -- high resolution
versions available at http://www.astro.ku.dk/~aake/astro-ph/0008048
Contact Discontinuities in Models of Contact Binaries Undergoing Thermal Relaxation Oscillations
In this paper we pursue the suggestion by Shu, Lubow & Anderson (1979) and
Wang (1995) that contact discontinuity (DSC) may exist in the secondary in the
expansion TRO (thermal relaxation oscillation) state. It is demonstrated that
there is a mass exchange instability in some range of mass ratio for the two
components. We show that the assumption of {\it constant} volume of the
secondary should be relaxed in DSC model. For {\it all} mass ratio the
secondary alway satisfies the condition that no mass flow returns to the
primary through the inner Lagrangian point. The secondary will expand in order
to equilibrate the interaction between the common convective envelope and the
secondary. The contact discontinuity in contact binary undergoing thermal
relaxation does not violate the second law of thermodynamics. The maintaining
condition of contact discontinuity is derived in the time-dependent model. It
is desired to improve the TRO model with the advanced contact discontinuity
layer in future detailed calculations.Comment: 5 pages in emulateapj, 1 figur
Power laws in a 2-leg ladder of interacting spinless fermions
We use the Density-Matrix Renormalization Group to study the single-particle
and two-particle correlation functions of spinless fermions in the ground state
of a quarter-filled ladder. This ladder consists of two chains having an
in-chain extended Coulomb interaction reaching to third neighbor and coupled by
inter-chain hopping. Within our short numerical coherence lengths, typically
reaching ten to twenty sites, we find a strong renormalization of the
interchain hopping and the existence of a dimensional crossover at smaller
interactions. We also find power exponents for single-particle hopping and
interchain polarization consistent with the single chain. The total charge
correlation function has a larger power exponent and shows signs of a crossover
from incoherent fermion hopping to coherent particle-hole pair motion between
chains. There are no significant excitation energies.Comment: RevTex 4 file, 10 pages, 10 eps figure
A Contemporary View of Coronal Heating
Determining the heating mechanism (or mechanisms) that causes the outer
atmosphere of the Sun, and many other stars, to reach temperatures orders of
magnitude higher than their surface temperatures has long been a key problem.
For decades the problem has been known as the coronal heating problem, but it
is now clear that `coronal heating' cannot be treated or explained in isolation
and that the heating of the whole solar atmosphere must be studied as a highly
coupled system. The magnetic field of the star is known to play a key role,
but, despite significant advancements in solar telescopes, computing power and
much greater understanding of theoretical mechanisms, the question of which
mechanism or mechanisms are the dominant supplier of energy to the chromosphere
and corona is still open. Following substantial recent progress, we consider
the most likely contenders and discuss the key factors that have made, and
still make, determining the actual (coronal) heating mechanism (or mechanisms)
so difficult
Cosmic Ray Protons and Magnetic Fields in Clusters of Galaxies and their Cosmological Consequences
The masses of clusters of galaxies estimated by gravitational lensing exceed
in many cases the mass estimates based on hydrostatic equilibrium. This may
suggest the existence of nonthermal pressure. We ask if radio galaxies can heat
and support the cluster gas with injected cosmic ray protons and magnetic field
densities, which are permitted by Faraday rotation and gamma ray observations
of clusters of galaxies. We conclude that they are powerful enough to do this
within a cluster radius of roughly 1 Mpc. If present, nonthermal pressures
could lead to a revised estimate of the ratio of baryonic mass to total mass,
and the apparent baryonic overdensity in clusters would disappear. In
consequence, , the clumping part of the cosmological density
, would be larger than .Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 16 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, epsfig.sty, aaspp4.st
Satellites and large doping- and temperature-dependence of electronic properties in hole-doped BaFe2As2
Over the last years, superconductivity has been discovered in several
families of iron-based compounds. Despite intense research, even basic
electronic properties of these materials, such as Fermi surfaces, effective
electron masses, or orbital characters are still subject to debate. Here, we
address an issue that has not been considered before, namely the consequences
of dynamical screening of the Coulomb interactions among Fe-d electrons. We
demonstrate its importance not only for correlation satellites seen in
photoemission spectroscopy, but also for the low-energy electronic structure.
From our analysis of the normal phase of BaFe2As2 emerges the picture of a
strongly correlated compound with strongly doping- and temperature-dependent
properties. In the hole overdoped regime, an incoherent metal is found, while
Fermi-liquid behavior is recovered in the undoped compound. At optimal doping,
the self-energy exhibits an unusual square-root energy dependence which leads
to strong band renormalizations near the Fermi level
Oscillating axion bubbles as alternative to supermassive black holes at galactic centers
Recent observations of near-infrared and X-ray flares from Sagittarius A*,
which is believed to be a supermassive black hole at the Galactic center, show
that the source exhibits about 20-minute periodic variability. Here we provide
arguments based on a quantitative analysis that supermassive objects at
galactic centers may be bubbles of dark matter axions rather than black holes.
An oscillating axion bubble can explain periodic variability of Sagittarius A*
and yields the axion mass about 0.6 meV which fits in the open axion mass
window. The bubble scenario with no other free parameters explains lack of
supermassive "black holes" with mass M<10^6 M_{Sun}. Low-mass bubbles decay
fast and as a result are very rare. We also found that the mass of an axion
bubble can not exceed 1.5\times 10^9 M_{Sun}, in agreement with the upper limit
on the supermassive "black hole" mass obtained from observations. Our finding,
if confirmed, suggests that Einstein general relativity is invalid for strong
gravity and the gravitational field for the bubble effectively becomes
repulsive at large potential. Imaging a shadow of the "black hole" at the
Galactic center with VLBI in the next decade can distinguish between the black
hole and the oscillating axion bubble scenarios. In the case of axion bubble, a
steady shadow will not be observed. Instead, the shadow will appear and
disappear periodically with a period of about 20 min.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, added derivation of the exponential metric based
on superposition principl
Some comments on "The Mathematical Universe"
I discuss some problems related to extreme mathematical realism, focusing on
a recently proposed "shut-up-and-calculate" approach to physics
(arXiv:0704.0646, arXiv:0709.4024). I offer arguments for a moderate
alternative, the essence of which lies in the acceptance that mathematics is
(at least in part) a human construction, and discuss concrete consequences of
this--at first sight purely philosophical--difference in point of view.Comment: 11 page
- âŠ