3,854 research outputs found
A microscopic mechanism for rejuvenation and memory effects in spin glasses
Aging in spin glasses (and in some other systems) reveals astonishing effects
of `rejuvenation and memory' upon temperature changes. In this paper, we
propose microscopic mechanisms (at the scale of spin-spin interactions) which
can be at the origin of such phenomena. Firstly, we recall that, in a
frustrated system, the effective average interaction between two spins may take
different values (possibly with opposite signs) at different temperatures. We
give simple examples of such situations, which we compute exactly. Such
mechanisms can explain why new ordering processes (rejuvenation) seem to take
place in spin glasses when the temperature is lowered. Secondly, we emphasize
the fact that inhomogeneous interactions do naturally lead to a wide
distribution of relaxation times for thermally activated flips. `Memory spots'
spontaneously appear, in the sense that the flipping time of some spin clusters
becomes extremely long when the temperature is decreased. Such memory spots are
capable of keeping the memory of previous ordering at a higher temperature
while new ordering processes occur at a lower temperature. After a qualitative
discussion of these mechanisms, we show in the numerical simulation of a
simplified example that this may indeed work. Our conclusion is that certain
chaos-like phenomena may show up spontaneously in any frustrated and
inhomogeneous magnetic system, without impeding the occurrence of memory
effects.Comment: 9 pages (11 figures) - revised version, to appear in Eur. Phys. J. B
(2001
Fluctuations and vortex pattern ordering in fully frustrated XY model with honeycomb lattice
The accidental degeneracy of various ground states in a fully frustrated XY
model with a honeycomb lattice is shown to survive even when the free energy of
the harmonic fluctuations is taken into account. The reason for that consists
in the existence of a hidden gauge symmetry between the Hamiltonians describing
the harmonic fluctuations in all these ground states. A particular vortex
pattern is selected only when anharmonic fluctuations are taken into account.
However, the observation of vortex ordering requires relatively large system
size L>>100000.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX4, a different method is used to find which
state is selected by anharmonic fluctuations, the last third of the text is
completly rewritte
Feedback Effect on Landau-Zener-Stueckelberg Transitions in Magnetic Systems
We examine the effect of the dynamics of the internal magnetic field on the
staircase magnetization curves observed in large-spin molecular magnets. We
show that the size of the magnetization steps depends sensitively on the
intermolecular interactions, even if these are very small compared to the
intra-molecular couplings.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures; paper reorganized, conclusions
modifie
Mechanism of the fluxional behaviour in (1–5-η-cycloheptadienyl)-(1–5-η-cycloheptatrienyl)iron
Evidence for a 1.2-shift mechanism of the 1-5-η-cycloheptatrienyl moiety with respect to the central iron atom of the title compound is presented together with absolute assignments of the ^(13)C n.m.r. chemical shifts of the C_(7)H_(7) ring. A low-temperature rocking motion of both rings can be frozen out at -70 °C
Quantum Fluctuation-Induced Phase Transition in S=1/2 XY-like Heisenberg Antiferromagnets on the Triangular Lattice
The selection of the ground state among nearly degenerate states due to
quantum fluctuations is studied for the S=1/2 XY-like Heisenberg
antiferromagnets on the triangular lattice in the magnetic field applied along
the hard axis, which was first pointed out by Nikuni and Shiba. We find that
the selected ground state sensitively depends on the degree of the anisotropy
and the magnitude of the magnetic field. This dependence is similar to that in
the corresponding classical model at finite temperatures where various types of
field induced phases appear due to the entropy effect. It is also found that
the similarity of the selected states in the classical and quantum models are
not the case in a two-leg ladder lattice, although the lattice consists of
triangles locally and the ground state of this lattice in the classical case is
the same as that of the triangular lattice.Comment: 15 pages, 35 figure
Nonexponential Relaxation of Magnetization at the Resonant Tunneling Point under a Fluctuating Random Noise
Nonexponential relaxation of magnetization at resonant tunneling points of
nanoscale molecular magnets is interpreted to be an effect of fluctuating
random field around the applied field. We demonstrate such relaxation in
Langevin equation analysis and clarify how the initial relaxation (square-root
time) changes to the exponential decay. The scaling properties of the
relaxation are also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 fgiure
Low-Lying Excited States of Quantum Antiferromagnets on a Triangular Lattice
We study low-lying states of the XY and Heisenberg antiferromagnets on a
triangular lattice to clarify whether spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs at
in the thermodynamic limit. Approximate forms of low-lying states are
proposed, in which degrees of freedom of the sublattice magnetization and of
the chirality are separated. It is shown that low-lying states can be
accurately described with the present approximation. It was argued that
low-lying states play an important role in symmetry breaking. With help of this
approximation, we discuss the contribution of low-lying states to symmetry
breaking of two types, namely creation of the spontaneous sublattice
magnetization and the spontaneous chirality. Furthermore, to show an evidence
for the occurrence of the symmetry breaking, we numerically study the low-lying
states of finite systems of the XY and Heisenberg antiferromagnets. It is found
that the necessary conditions for the symmetry breaking to occur are satisfied
in these models.Comment: LaTex 22 pages, figures included in uuencoded form, to be published
in J.Stat.Phy
Magnetization Process of the S=1 and 1/2 Uniform and Distorted Kagome Heisenberg Antiferromagnets
The magnetization process of the S=1 and 1/2 kagome Heisenberg
antiferromagnet is studied by means of the numerical exact diagonalization
method. It is found that the magnetization curve at zero temperature has a
plateau at 1/3 of the full magnetization. In the presence of lattice distortion, this plateau is enhanced and eventually the
ferrimagnetic state is realized. There also appear the minor plateaux above the
main plateau. The physical origin of these phenomena is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figures included, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
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