3,087 research outputs found
Theoretical study of X-ray absorption of three-dimensional topological insulator
X-ray absorption edge singularity which is usually relevant for metals is
studied for the prototype topological insulator .
The generalized integral equation of Nozi\`eres and Dominicis type for X-ray
edge singularity is derived and solved. The spin texture of surfaces states
causes a component of singularity dependent on the helicity of the spin
texture. It also yields another component for which the singularity from
excitonic processes is absent.Comment: RevTeX 4.1. 4 pages, no figur
An improved source model for aircraft interior noise studies
There is concern that advanced turboprop engines currently being developed may produce excessive aircraft cabin noise levels. This concern has stimulated renewed interest in developing aircraft interior noise reduction methods that do not significantly increase take off weight. An existing analytical model for noise transmission into aircraft cabins was utilized to investigate the behavior of an improved propeller source model for use in aircraft interior noise studies. The new source model, a virtually rotating dipole, is shown to adequately match measured fuselage sound pressure distributions, including the correct phase relationships, for published data. The virtually rotating dipole is used to study the sensitivity of synchrophasing effectiveness to the fuselage sound pressure trace velocity distribution. Results of calculations are presented which reveal the importance of correctly modeling the surface pressure phase relations in synchrophasing and other aircraft interior noise studies
The thermopower as a fingerprint of the Kondo breakdown quantum critical point
We propose that the thermoelectric power distinguishes two competing
scenarios for quantum phase transitions in heavy fermions : the
spin-density-wave (SDW) theory and breakdown of the Kondo effect. In the Kondo
breakdown scenario, the Seebeck coefficient turns out to collapse from the
temperature scale , associated with quantum fluctuations of the Fermi
surface reconfiguration. This feature differs radically from the physics of the
SDW theory, where no reconstruction of the Fermi surface occurs, and can be
considered as the hallmark of the Kondo breakdown theory. We test these ideas,
upon experimental results for YbRhSi
Spinon-Holon binding in model
Using a phenomenological model, we discuss the consequences of spinon-holon
binding in the U(1) slave-boson approach to model. Within a small
( hole concentration) expansion, we show that spinon-holon binding produces
a pseudo-gap normal state with a segmented Fermi surface and the
superconducting state is formed by opening an "additional" d-wave gap on the
segmented Fermi surface. The d-wave gap merge with the pseudo-gap smoothly as
temperature . The quasi-particles in the superconducting state are
coupled to external electromagnetic field with a coupling constant of order
where , depending on the strength of the
effective spinon-holon binding potential.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Boundary-induced violation of the Dirac fermion parity and its signatures in local and global tunneling spectra of graphene
Extended defects in graphene, such as linear edges, break the translational
invariance and can also have an impact on the symmetries specific to massless
Dirac-like quasiparticles in this material. The paper examines the consequences
of a broken Dirac fermion parity in the framework of the effective boundary
conditions varying from the Berry-Mondragon mass confinement to a zigzag edge.
The parity breaking reflects the structural sublattice asymmetry of zigzag-type
edges and is closely related to the previously predicted time-reversal
symmetric edge states. We calculate the local and global densities of the edge
states and show that they carry a specific polarization, resembling, to some
extent, that of spin-polarized materials. The lack of the parity leads to a
nonanalytical particle-hole asymmetry in the edge-state properties. We use our
findings to interpret recently observed tunneling spectra in zigzag-terminated
graphene. We also propose a graphene-based tunneling device where the
particle-hole asymmetric edge states result in a strongly nonlinear
conductance-voltage characteristics, which could be used to manipulate the
tunneling transport.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Tunneling spectra of layered strongly correlated d-wave superconductors
Tunneling conductance experiments on cuprate superconductors exhibit a large
diversity of spectra that appear in different nano-sized regions of
inhomogeneous samples. In this letter, we use a mean-field approach to the
tt't''J model in order to address the features in these spectra that deviate
from the BCS paradigm, namely, the bias sign asymmetry at high bias, the
generic lack of evidence for the Van Hove singularity, and the occasional
absence of coherence peaks. We conclude that these features can be reproduced
in homogeneous layered d-wave superconductors solely due to a proximate Mott
insulating transition. We also establish the connection between the above
tunneling spectral features and the strong renormalization of the electron
dispersion around (0,pi) and (pi,0) and the momentum space anisotropy of
electronic states observed in ARPES experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Added comment on the role of sample
inhomogeneity. Published version. Homepage http://dao.mit.edu/~wen
Decoherence in quantum dots due to real and virtual transitions: a non-perturbative calculation
We investigate theoretically acoustic phonon induced decoherence in quantum
dots. We calculate the dephasing of fundamental (interband or intraband)
optical transitions due to real and virtual transitions with higher energy
levels. Up to two acoustic phonon processes (absorption and/or emission) are
taken into account simultaneously in a non-perturbative manner. An analytic
expression of acoustic phonon induced broadening is given as a function of the
electron-phonon matrix elements and is physically interpreted. The theory is
applied to the dephasing of intersublevel transitions in self-assembled quantum
dots.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
X-ray edge singularity of bilayer graphene
The X-ray edge singularity of bilayer graphene is studied by generalizing the
path integral approach based on local action which was employed for monolayer
graphene. In sharp contrast to the case of monolayer graphene, the bilayer
graphene is found to exhibit the edge singularity even at half-filling and its
characteristics are determined by interlayer coupling. At finite bias the
singular behaviors sensitively depend on the relative magnitude of fermi energy
and applied bias, which is due to the peculiar shape of energy band at finite
bias.Comment: RevTeX 4.1, 4 pages. No figur
Spin-Seebeck effect in a strongly interacting Fermi gas
We study the spin-Seebeck effect in a strongly interacting, two-component
Fermi gas and propose an experiment to measure this effect by relatively
displacing spin up and spin down atomic clouds in a trap using spin-dependent
temperature gradients. We compute the spin-Seebeck coefficient and related
spin-heat transport coefficients as functions of temperature and interaction
strength. We find that when the inter-spin scattering length becomes larger
than the Fermi wavelength, the spin-Seebeck coefficient changes sign as a
function of temperature, and hence so does the direction of the
spin-separation. We compute this zero-crossing temperature as a function of
interaction strength and in particular in the unitary limit for the inter-spin
scattering
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