1,380 research outputs found
The History of Intercollegiate Track and Field at Eastern Illinois University from 1967 through 1976
Many-body localization characterized from a one-particle perspective
We show that the one-particle density matrix can be used to
characterize the interaction-driven many-body localization transition in closed
fermionic systems. The natural orbitals (the eigenstates of ) are
localized in the many-body localized phase and spread out when one enters the
delocalized phase, while the occupation spectrum (the set of eigenvalues of
) reveals the distinctive Fock-space structure of the many-body
eigenstates, exhibiting a step-like discontinuity in the localized phase. The
associated one-particle occupation entropy is small in the localized phase and
large in the delocalized phase, with diverging fluctuations at the transition.
We analyze the inverse participation ratio of the natural orbitals and find
that it is independent of system size in the localized phase.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; v2: added two appendices and a new figure panel
in main text; v3: updated figur
Pressure, ultrasonic vibration and temperature effects on gold coppter contacts
An ultrasonic bonder, modified to include heating in the bonding cycle, was used to produce contact between a small gold ball and a polished copper sheet. Contact resistance measurements were used to follow the effects of the bonding parameters
Carbon dioxide and fruit odor transduction in Drosophila olfactory neurons. What controls their dynamic properties?
We measured frequency response functions between odorants and action potentials in two types of neurons in Drosophila antennal basiconic sensilla. CO2 was used to stimulate ab1C neurons, and the fruit odor ethyl butyrate was used to stimulate ab3A neurons. We also measured frequency response functions for light-induced action potential responses from transgenic flies expressing H134R-channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) in the ab1C and ab3A neurons. Frequency response functions for all stimulation methods were well-fitted by a band-pass filter function with two time constants that determined the lower and upper frequency limits of the response. Low frequency time constants were the same in each type of neuron, independent of stimulus method, but varied between neuron types. High frequency time constants were significantly slower with ethyl butyrate stimulation than light or CO2 stimulation. In spite of these quantitative differences, there were strong similarities in the form and frequency ranges of all responses. Since light-activated ChR2 depolarizes neurons directly, rather than through a chemoreceptor mechanism, these data suggest that low frequency dynamic properties of Drosophila olfactory sensilla are dominated by neuron-specific ionic processes during action potential production. In contrast, high frequency dynamics are limited by processes associated with earlier steps in odor transduction, and CO2 is detected more rapidly than fruit odor
Finite-temperature charge transport in the one-dimensional Hubbard model
We study the charge conductivity of the one-dimensional repulsive Hubbard
model at finite temperature using the method of dynamical quantum typicality,
focusing at half filling. This numerical approach allows us to obtain current
autocorrelation functions from systems with as many as 18 sites, way beyond the
range of standard exact diagonalization. Our data clearly suggest that the
charge Drude weight vanishes with a power law as a function of system size. The
low-frequency dependence of the conductivity is consistent with a finite dc
value and thus with diffusion, despite large finite-size effects. Furthermore,
we consider the mass-imbalanced Hubbard model for which the charge Drude weight
decays exponentially with system size, as expected for a non-integrable model.
We analyze the conductivity and diffusion constant as a function of the mass
imbalance and we observe that the conductivity of the lighter component
decreases exponentially fast with the mass-imbalance ratio. While in the
extreme limit of immobile heavy particles, the Falicov-Kimball model, there is
an effective Anderson-localization mechanism leading to a vanishing
conductivity of the lighter species, we resolve finite conductivities for an
inverse mass ratio of .Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Electronic structure calculations for PrFe4P12 filled skutterudite using Extended Huckel tight-binding method
To get insight into the electronic properties of PrFe4P12 skutterudite, band
electronic structure calculations, Total and Projected Density of States,
Crystal Orbital Overlap Population and Mulliken Population Analysis were
performed. The energy bands yield a semi metallic behavior with a direct gap
(at gamma) of 0.02 eV. Total and Projected Density of States provided
information of the contribution from each orbital of each atom to the total
Density of States. Moreover, the bonding strength between some atoms within the
unit cell was obtained. Mulliken Population analysis suggests ionic behavior
for this compound
Frustrated ferromagnetic spin-1/2 chain in a magnetic field: The phase diagram and thermodynamic properties
The frustrated ferromagnetic spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain is studied by means of
a low-energy field theory as well as the density-matrix renormalization group
and exact diagonalization methods. Firstly, we study the ground-state phase
diagram in a magnetic field and find an `even-odd' (EO) phase characterized by
bound pairs of magnons in the region of two weakly coupled antiferromagnetic
chains. A jump in the magnetization curves signals a first-order transition at
the boundary of the EO phase, but otherwise the curves are smooth. Secondly, we
discuss thermodynamic properties at zero field, where we confirm a double-peak
structure in the specific heat for moderate frustrating next-nearest neighbor
interactions.Comment: 4 pages RevTex4, 4 figures. Minor changes, title modified. Additional
material is available here:
http://www.theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~honecker/j1j2-td
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