275 research outputs found
Knotted Defects in Nematic Liquid Crystals
We show that the number of distinct topological states associated to a given
knotted defect, , in a nematic liquid crystal is equal to the determinant of
the link . We give an interpretation of these states, demonstrate how they
may be identified in experiments and describe the consequences for material
behaviour and interactions between multiple knots. We show that stable knots
can be created in a bulk cholesteric and illustrate the topology by classifying
a simulated Hopf link. In addition we give a topological heuristic for the
resolution of strand crossings in defect coarsening processes which allows us
to distinguish topological classes of a given link and to make predictions
about defect crossings in nematic liquid crystals.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Umbilic Lines in Orientational Order
Three-dimensional orientational order in systems whose ground states possess
non-zero, chiral gradients typically exhibits line-like structures or defects:
lines in cholesterics or Skyrmion tubes in ferromagnets for example.
Here we show that such lines can be identified as a set of natural geometric
singularities in a unit vector field, the generalisation of the umbilic points
of a surface. We characterise these lines in terms of the natural vector
bundles that the order defines and show that they give a way to localise and
identify Skyrmion distortions in chiral materials -- in particular that they
supply a natural representative of the Poincar\'{e} dual of the cocycle
describing the topology. Their global structure leads to the definition of a
self-linking number and helicity integral which relates the linking of umbilic
lines to the Hopf invariant of the texture.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Violation of non-interacting -representability of the exact solutions of the Schr\"odinger equation for a two-electron quantum dot in a homogeneous magnetic field
We have shown by using the exact solutions for the two-electron system in a
parabolic confinement and a homogeneous magnetic field [ M.Taut, J Phys.A{\bf
27}, 1045 (1994) ] that both exact densities (charge- and the paramagnetic
current density) can be non-interacting -representable (NIVR) only in a
few special cases, or equivalently, that an exact Kohn-Sham (KS) system does
not always exist. All those states at non-zero can be NIVR, which are
continuously connected to the singlet or triplet ground states at B=0. In more
detail, for singlets (total orbital angular momentum is even) both
densities can be NIVR if the vorticity of the exact solution vanishes. For
this is trivially guaranteed because the paramagnetic current density
vanishes. The vorticity based on the exact solutions for the higher
does not vanish, in particular for small r. In the limit this can
even be shown analytically. For triplets ( is odd) and if we assume
circular symmetry for the KS system (the same symmetry as the real system) then
only the exact states with can be NIVR with KS states having angular
momenta and . Without specification of the symmetry of the KS
system the condition for NIVR is that the small-r-exponents of the KS states
are 0 and 1.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Giant thermoelectric effects in a proximity-coupled superconductor-ferromagnet device
The usually negligibly small thermoelectric effects in superconducting
heterostructures can be boosted dramatically due to the simultaneous effect of
spin splitting and spin filtering. Building on an idea of our earlier work
[Phys. Rev. Lett. , 047002 (2013)], we propose realistic
mesoscopic setups to observe thermoelectric effects in superconductor
heterostructures with ferromagnetic interfaces or terminals. We focus on the
Seebeck effect being a direct measure of the local thermoelectric response and
find that a thermopower of the order of can be achieved in
a transistor-like structure, in which a third terminal allows to drain the
thermal current. A measurement of the thermopower can furthermore be used to
determine quantitatively the spin-dependent interface parameters that induce
the spin splitting. For applications in nanoscale cooling we discuss the figure
of merit for which we find enormous values exceeding 1 for temperature
K
Nonlinear thermoelectric effects in high-field superconductor-ferromagnet tunnel junctions
Thermoelectric effects result from the coupling of charge and heat transport,
and can be used for thermometry, cooling and harvesting of thermal energy. The
microscopic origin of thermoelectric effects is a broken electron-hole
symmetry, which is usually quite small in metal structures, and vanishes at low
temperatures. We report on a combined experimental and theoretical
investigation of thermoelectric effects in superconductor/ferromagnet hybrid
structures. We investigate the depencence of thermoelectric currents on the
thermal excitation, as well as on the presence of a dc bias voltage across the
junction. Large thermoelectric effects are observed in
superconductor/ferromagnet and superconductor/normal-metal hybrid structures.
The spin-independent signals observed under finite voltage bias are shown to be
reciprocal to the physics of superconductor/normal-metal microrefrigerators.
The spin-dependent thermoelectric signals in the linear regime are due to the
coupling of spin and heat transport, and can be used to design more efficient
refrigeratorsComment: 11 pages, submitted to Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnolog
The strength of the radial-breathing mode in single-walled carbon nanotubes
We show by ab initio calculations that the electron-phonon coupling matrix
element M of the radial breathing mode in single-walled carbon nanotubes
depends strongly on tube chirality. For nanotubes of the same diameter the
coupling strength |M|^2 is up to one order of magnitude stronger for zig-zag
than for armchair tubes. For (n,m) tubes M depends on the value of (n-m) mod 3,
which allows to discriminate semiconducting nano tubes with similar diameter by
their Raman scattering intensity. We show measured resonance Raman profiles of
the radial breathing mode which support our theoretical predictions
The Geometry of the Cholesteric Phase
We propose a construction of a cholesteric pitch axis for an arbitrary
nematic director field as an eigenvalue problem. Our definition leads to a
Frenet-Serret description of an orthonormal triad determined by this axis, the
director, and the mutually perpendicular direction. With this tool we are able
to compare defect structures in cholesterics, biaxial nematics, and smectics.
Though they all have similar ground state manifolds, the defect structures are
different and cannot be, in general, translated from one phase to the other.Comment: 5 pages, the full catastroph
Geometry of the cholesteric phase
We propose a construction of a cholesteric pitch axis for an arbitrary nematic director field as an eigenvalue problem. Our definition leads to a Frenet-Serret description of an orthonormal triad determined by this axis, the director, and the mutually perpendicular direction. With this tool, we are able to compare defect structures in cholesterics, biaxial nematics, and smectics. Though they all have similar ground state manifolds, the defect structures are different and cannot, in general, be translated from one phase to the other
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