359 research outputs found

    Ab initio study of mirages and magnetic interactions in quantum corrals

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    The state of the art ab initio calculations of quantum mirages,the spin-polarization of surface-state electrons and the exchange interaction between magnetic adatoms in Cu and Co corrals on Cu(111) are presented. We find that the spin-polarization of the surface-state electrons caused by magnetic adatoms can be projected to a remote location and can be strongly enhanced in corrals compared to an open surface.Our studies give a clear evidence that quantum corrals could permit to tailor the exchange interaction between magnetic adatoms at large separations. The spin-polarization of surface-state electrons at the empty focus in the Co corral used in the experimental setup of Manoharan et al., (Nature 403, 512 (2000)) is revealed.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter

    Ab Initio Treatment of Collective Correlations and the Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay of 48^{48}Ca

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    Working with Hamiltonians from chiral effective field theory, we develop a novel framework for describing arbitrary deformed medium-mass nuclei by combining the in-medium similarity renormalization group with the generator coordinate method. The approach leverages the ability of the first method to capture dynamic correlations and the second to include collective correlations without violating symmetries. We use our scheme to compute the matrix element that governs the neutrinoless double beta decay of 48^{48}Ca to 48^{48}Ti, and find it to have the value 0.610.61, near or below the predictions of most phenomenological methods. The result opens the door to ab initio calculations of the matrix elements for the decay of heavier nuclei such as 76^{76}Ge, 130^{130}Te, and 136^{136}Xe.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures and 1 table. supplementary material included. version to be publishe

    Buffet test in the National Transonic Facility

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    A buffet test of a commercial transport model was accomplished in the National Transonic Facility at the NASA Langley Research Center. This aeroelastic test was unprecedented for this wind tunnel and posed a high risk for the facility. Presented here are the test results from a structural dynamics and aeroelastic response point of view. The activities required for the safety analysis and risk assessment are described. The test was conducted in the same manner as a flutter test and employed on-board dynamic instrumentation, real time dynamic data monitoring, and automatic and manual tunnel interlock systems for protecting the model

    Magnetic structure of bulk GdMnO<sub>3</sub>: Influence of strain

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    Internal structural distortions are of great interest in the determination of electronic and magnetic properties of the strong correlated rare earth manganites. When combined with external structural modifications like uniaxial or biaxial strains, structural distortions can lead to the emergence of new magnetic ground states. This realization is seemingly more probable with the low-band-width manganite GdMnO3 on the grounds that it is located in the magnetoelectric phase diagram of orthorhombic rare earth manganites between the A-type antiferromagnetic (AFM) order and the cycloidal spin orders. Herein, a thorough analysis of the magnetic structure of GdMnO3 based on the density functional theory connected with a classical Heisenberg model together with Monte Carlo calculations is presented. It is found whether a compressive uniaxial strain along the c direction or biaxial strain on the ab plane favors a ferromagnetic (FM) ground state over the AFM one. On the contrary, a tensile strain also on the ab plane is likely to stabilize the E-type AFM order

    Modewise Johnson-Lindenstrauss Embeddings for Nuclear Many-Body Theory

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    In this work, we explore modewise Johnson-Lindenstrauss embeddings (JLEs) as a tool to reduce the computational cost and memory requirements of nuclear many-body methods. JLEs are randomized projections of high-dimensional data tensors onto low-dimensional subspaces that preserve key structural features. Such embeddings allow for the oblivious and incremental compression of large tensors, e.g., the nuclear Hamiltonian, into significantly smaller random sketches that still allow for the accurate calculation of ground-state energies and other observables. Their oblivious character makes it possible to compress a tensor without knowing in advance exactly what observables one might want to approximate at a later time. This opens the door for the use of tensors that are much too large to store in memory, e.g., complete two-plus three-nucleon Hamiltonians in large, symmetry-unrestricted bases. Such compressed Hamiltonians can be stored and used later on with relative ease. As a first step, we analyze the JLE's impact on the second-order Many-Body Perturbation Theory (MBPT) corrections for nuclear ground-state observables. Numerical experiments for a wide range of closed-shell nuclei, model spaces and state-of-the-art nuclear interactions demonstrate the validity and potential of the proposed approach: We can compress nuclear Hamiltonians hundred- to thousand-fold while only incurring mean relative errors of 1\% or less in ground-state observables. Importantly, we show that JLEs capture the relevant physical information contained in the highly structured Hamiltonian tensor despite their random characteristics. In addition to the significant storage savings, the achieved compressions imply multiple order-of magnitude reductions in computational effort when the compressed Hamiltonians are used in higher-order MBPT or nonperturbative many-body methods.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figure

    Exchange interaction and its tuning in magnetic binary chalcogenides

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    Using a first-principles Green's function approach we study magnetic properties of the magnetic binary chalcogenides Bi2Te3, Bi2Se3, and Sb2Te3. The magnetic coupling between transition-metal impurities is long-range, extends beyond a quintuple layer, and decreases with increasing number of d electrons per 3d atom. We find two main mechanisms for the magnetic interaction in these materials: the indirect exchange interaction mediated by free carriers and the indirect interaction between magnetic moments via chalcogen atoms. The calculated Curie temperatures of these systems are in good agreement with available experimental data. Our results provide deep insight into magnetic interactions in magnetic binary chalcogenides and open a way to design new materials for promising applications
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