1,690 research outputs found
Frustrated three-leg spin tubes: from spin 1/2 with chirality to spin 3/2
Motivated by the recent discovery of the spin tube
[(CuCltachH)Cl]Cl, we investigate the properties of a frustrated
three-leg spin tube with antiferromagnetic intra-ring and inter-ring couplings.
We pay special attention to the evolution of the properties from weak to strong
inter-ring coupling and show on the basis of extensive density matrix
renormalization group and exact diagonalization calculations that the system
undergoes a first-order phase transition between a dimerized gapped phase at
weak coupling that can be described by the usual spin-chirality model and a
gapless critical phase at strong coupling that can be described by an effective
spin-3/2 model. We also show that there is a magnetization plateau at 1/3 in
the gapped phase and slightly beyond. The implications for
[(CuCltachH)Cl]Cl are discussed, with the conclusion that this
system behaves essentially as a spin-3/2 chain.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, revised versio
Charge order induced by electron-lattice interaction in NaV2O5
We present Density Matrix Renormalization Group calculations of the
ground-state properties of quarter-filled ladders including static
electron-lattice coupling. Isolated ladders and two coupled ladders are
considered, with model parameters obtained from band-structure calculations for
-NaVO. The relevant Holstein coupling to the lattice
causes static out-of-plane lattice distortions, which appear concurrently with
a charge-ordered state and which exhibit the same zigzag pattern observed in
experiments. The inclusion of electron-lattice coupling drastically reduces the
critical nearest-neighbor Coulomb repulsion needed to obtain the
charge-ordered state. No spin gap is present in the ordered phase. The charge
ordering is driven by the Coulomb repulsion and the electron-lattice
interaction. With electron-lattice interaction, coupling two ladders has
virtually no effect on or on the characteristics of the charge-ordered
phase. At V=0.46\eV, a value consistent with previous estimates, the lattice
distortion, charge gap, charge order parameter, and the effective spin coupling
are in good agreement with experimental data for NaVO_5$.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
The Density Matrix Renormalization Group applied to single-particle Quantum Mechanics
A simplified version of White's Density Matrix Renormalization Group (DMRG)
algorithm has been used to find the ground state of the free particle on a
tight-binding lattice. We generalize this algorithm to treat the tight-binding
particle in an arbitrary potential and to find excited states. We thereby solve
a discretized version of the single-particle Schr\"odinger equation, which we
can then take to the continuum limit. This allows us to obtain very accurate
results for the lowest energy levels of the quantum harmonic oscillator,
anharmonic oscillator and double-well potential. We compare the DMRG results
thus obtained with those achieved by other methods.Comment: REVTEX file, 21 pages, 3 Tables, 4 eps Figure
Coherent matter waves emerging from Mott-insulators
We study the formation of (quasi-)coherent matter waves emerging from a Mott
insulator for strongly interacting bosons on a one-dimensional lattice. It has
been shown previously that a quasi-condensate emerges at momentum k=\pi/2a,
where a is the lattice constant, in the limit of infinitely strong repulsion
(hard-core bosons). Here we show that this phenomenon persists for all values
of the repulsive interaction that lead to a Mott insulator at a commensurate
filling. The non-equilibrium dynamics of hard-core bosons is treated exactly by
means of a Jordan-Wigner transformation, and the generic case is studied using
a time-dependent density matrix renormalization group technique. Different
methods for controlling the emerging matter wave are discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures. Published versio
Numerical study of a superconductor-insulator transition in a half-filled Hubbard chain with distant transfers
The ground state of a one-dimensional Hubbard model having the next-nearest
neighbor hopping (t') as well as the nearest-neighbor one (t) is numerically
investigated at half-filling. A quantum Monte Carlo result shows a slowly
decaying pairing correlation for a sizeable interaction strength ,
while the system is shown to become insulating for yet larger
from a direct evaluation of the charge gap with the density-matrix
renormalization group method. The results are consistent with Fabrizio's recent
weak-coupling theory which suggests a transition from a superconductor into an
insulator at a finite U.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, uses epsf.sty and multicol.st
Quantum criticality of dipolar spin chains
We show that a chain of Heisenberg spins interacting with long-range dipolar
forces in a magnetic field h perpendicular to the chain exhibits a quantum
critical point belonging to the two-dimensional Ising universality class.
Within linear spin-wave theory the magnon dispersion for small momenta k is
[Delta^2 + v_k^2 k^2]^{1/2}, where Delta^2 \propto |h - h_c| and v_k^2 \propto
|ln k|. For fields close to h_c linear spin-wave theory breaks down and we
investigate the system using density-matrix and functional renormalization
group methods. The Ginzburg regime where non-Gaussian fluctuations are
important is found to be rather narrow on the ordered side of the transition,
and very broad on the disordered side.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Float zone experiments in space
The molten zone/freezing crystal interface system and all the mechanisms were examined. If Marangoni convection produces oscillatory flows in the float zone of semiconductor materials, such as silicon, then it is unlikely that superior quality crystals can be grown in space using this process. The major goals were: (1) to determine the conditions for the onset of Marangoni flows in molten tin, a model system for low Prandtl number molten semiconductor materials; (2) to determine whether the flows can be suppressed by a thin oxide layer; and (3) based on experimental and mathematical analysis, to predict whether oscillatory flows will occur in the float zone silicon geometry in space, and if so, could it be suppressed by thin oxide or nitride films. Techniques were developed to analyze molten tin surfaces in a UHV system in a disk float zone geometry to minimize buoyancy flows. The critical Marangoni number for onset of oscillatory flows was determined to be greater than 4300 on atomically clean molten tin surfaces
The FFLO state in the one-dimensional attractive Hubbard model and its fingerprint in the spatial noise correlations
We explore the pairing properties of the one-dimensional attractive Hubbard
model in the presence of finite spin polarization. The correlation exponents
for the most important fluctuations are determined as a function of the density
and the polarization. We find that in a system with spin population imbalance,
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO)-type pairing at wavevector
Q=|k_{F,\uparrow}-k_{F,\downarrow}| is always dominant and there is no
Chandrasekhar-Clogston limit. We then investigate the case of weakly coupled 1D
systems and determine the region of stability of the 1D FFLO phase. This
picture is corroborated by density-matrix-renormalization-group (DMRG)
simulations of the spatial noise correlations in uniform and trapped systems,
unambiguously revealing the presence of fermion pairs with nonzero momentum Q.
This opens up an interesting possibility for experimental studies of FFLO
states.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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