1,077 research outputs found

    Nonequilibrium multicritical behavior in anisotropic Heisenberg ferromagnet driven by oscillating magnetic field

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    The Heisenberg ferromagnet (uniaxially anisotropic along z-direction), in the presence of time dependent (but uniform over space) magnetic field, is studied by Monte Carlo simulation. The time dependent magnetic field was taken as elliptically polarised in such a way that the resulting field vector rotates in the XZ plane. In the limit of low anisotropy, the dynamical responses of the system are studied as functions of temperature and the amplitudes of the magnetic field. As the temperature decreases, it aws found that the system undergoes multiple dynamical phase transitions. In this limit, the multiple transitions were studied in details and the phase diagram for this observed multicritical behaviour was drawn in the field amplitude and temperature palne.The natures (continuous/discontinuous) of the transitions are determined by the temperature variations of fourth order Binder cumulant ratio and the distributions of the order parameter near the transition points. The transitions are supported by finite size study. The temperature variations of the variances of dynamic order parameter components (for different system sizes) indicate the existence of diverging length scale near the dynamic transition points. The frequency dependences of the transition temperatures of the multiple dynamic transition are also studied briefly.Comment: 14 Pages Latex, 17 Postscript figures. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys. C (2006) Ma

    Simulations of Information Transport in Spin Chains

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    Transport of quantum information in linear spin chains has been the subject of much theoretical work. Experimental studies by nuclear spin systems in solid-state by NMR (a natural implementation of such models) is complicated since the dipolar Hamiltonian is not solely comprised of nearest-neighbor XY-Heisenberg couplings. We present here a similarity transformation between the XY-Heisenberg Hamiltonian and the grade raising Hamiltonian, an interaction which is achievable with the collective control provided by radio-frequency pulses in NMR. Not only does this second Hamiltonian allows us to simulate the information transport in a spin chain, but it also provides a means to observe its signature experimentally

    From Disordered Crystal to Glass: Exact Theory

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    We calculate thermodynamic properties of a disordered model insulator, starting from the ideal simple-cubic lattice (g=0g = 0) and increasing the disorder parameter gg to ≫1/2\gg 1/2. As in earlier Einstein- and Debye- approximations, there is a phase transition at gc=1/2g_{c} = 1/2. For g<gcg<g_{c} the low-T heat-capacity C∼T3C \sim T^{3} whereas for g>gcg>g_{c}, C∼TC \sim T. The van Hove singularities disappear at {\em any finite gg}. For g>1/2g>1/2 we discover novel {\em fixed points} in the self-energy and spectral density of this model glass.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett., 8 pages, 4 figure

    The Trapped Polarized Fermi Gas at Unitarity

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    We consider population-imbalanced two-component Fermi gases under external harmonic confinement interacting through short-range two-body potentials with diverging s-wave scattering length. Using the fixed-node diffusion Monte Carlo method, the energies of the "normal state" are determined as functions of the population-imbalance and the number of particles. The energies of the trapped system follow, to a good approximation, a universal curve even for fairly small systems. A simple parameterization of the universal curve is presented and related to the equation of state of the bulk system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 tables, 2 figure

    Electric Control of Spin Currents and Spin-Wave Logic

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    Spin waves in insulating magnets are ideal carriers for spin currents with low energy dissipation. An electric field can modify the dispersion of spin waves, by directly affecting, via spin-orbit coupling, the electrons that mediate the interaction between magnetic ions. Our microscopic calculations based on the super-exchange model indicate that this effect of the electric field is sufficiently large to be used to effectively control spin currents. We apply these findings to the design of a spin-wave interferometric device, which acts as a logic inverter and can be used as a building block for room-temperature, low-dissipation logic circuits.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, added the LL equation and the discussion on spin-wave-induced electric field, accepted by PR

    Theory of optical spectral weights in Mott insulators with orbital degrees of freedom

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    Introducing partial sum rules for the optical multiplet transitions, we outline a unified approach to magnetic and optical properties of strongly correlated transition metal oxides. On the example of LaVO3_3 we demonstrate how the temperature and polarization dependences of different components of the optical multiplet are determined by the underlying spin and orbital correlations dictated by the low-energy superexchange Hamiltonian. Thereby the optical data provides deep insight into the complex spin-orbital physics and the role played by orbital fluctuations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, expanded versio

    Anomalous dynamics in two- and three- dimensional Heisenberg-Mattis spin glasses

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    We investigate the spectral and localization properties of unmagnetized Heisenberg-Mattis spin glasses, in space dimensionalities d=2d=2 and 3, at T=0. We use numerical transfer-matrix methods combined with finite-size scaling to calculate Lyapunov exponents, and eigenvalue-counting theorems, coupled with Gaussian elimination algorithms, to evaluate densities of states. In d=2d=2 we find that all states are localized, with the localization length diverging as ω−1\omega^{-1}, as energy ω→0\omega \to 0. Logarithmic corrections to density of states behave in accordance with theoretical predictions. In d=3d=3 the density-of-states dependence on energy is the same as for spin waves in pure antiferromagnets, again in agreement with theoretical predictions, though the corresponding amplitudes differ.Comment: RevTeX4, 9 pages, 9 .eps figure

    A modified triplet-wave expansion method applied to the alternating Heisenberg chain

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    An alternative triplet-wave expansion formalism for dimerized spin systems is presented, a modification of the 'bond operator' formalism of Sachdev and Bhatt. Projection operators are used to confine the system to the physical subspace, rather than constraint equations. The method is illustrated for the case of the alternating Heisenberg chain, and comparisons are made with the results of dimer series expansions and exact diagonalization. Some discussion is included of the phenomenon of 'quasiparticle breakdown', as it applies to the two-triplon bound states in this model.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure

    Magnetic structure and phase diagram in a spin-chain system: Ca3_3Co2_2O6_6

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    The low-temperature structure of the frustrated spin-chain compound Ca3_3Co2_2O6_6 is determined by the ground state of the 2D Ising model on the triangular lattice. At high-temperatures it transforms to the honeycomb magnetic structure. It is shown that the crossover between the two magnetic structures at 12 K arises from the entropy accumulated in the disordered chains. This interpretation is in an agreement with the experimental data. General rules for for the phase diagram of frustrated Ising chain compounds are formulated.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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