10,208 research outputs found
On the construction of Wannier functions in topological insulators: the 3D case
We investigate the possibility of constructing exponentially localized
composite Wannier bases, or equivalently smooth periodic Bloch frames, for
3-dimensional time-reversal symmetric topological insulators, both of bosonic
and of fermionic type, so that the bases in question are also compatible with
time-reversal symmetry. This problem is translated in the study, of independent
interest, of homotopy classes of continuous, periodic, and time-reversal
symmetric families of unitary matrices. We identify three -valued
complete invariants for these homotopy classes. When these invariants vanish,
we provide an algorithm which constructs a "multi-step" logarithm that is
employed to continuously deform the given family into a constant one,
identically equal to the identity matrix. This algorithm leads to a
constructive procedure to produce the composite Wannier bases mentioned above.Comment: 29 pages. Version 2: minor corrections of misprints, corrected proofs
of Theorems 2.4 and 2.9, added references. Accepted for publication in
Annales Henri Poicar\'
Beyond Diophantine Wannier diagrams: Gap labelling for Bloch-Landau Hamiltonians
It is well known that, given a purely magnetic Landau Hamiltonian with a
constant magnetic field which generates a magnetic flux per unit
area, then any spectral island consisting of infinitely
degenerate Landau levels carries an integrated density of states
. Wannier later discovered a similar Diophantine
relation expressing the integrated density of states of a gapped group of bands
of the Hofstadter Hamiltonian as a linear function of the magnetic field flux
with integer slope.
We extend this result to a gap labelling theorem for any Bloch-Landau
operator which also has a bounded -periodic electric
potential. Assume that has a spectral island which remains
isolated from the rest of the spectrum as long as lies in a compact
interval . Then on such
intervals, where the constant while .
The integer is the Chern marker of the spectral projection onto the
spectral island . This result also implies that the Fermi projection
on , albeit continuous in in the strong topology, is nowhere
continuous in the norm topology if either or and is
rational.
Our proofs, otherwise elementary, do not use non-commutative geometry but are
based on gauge covariant magnetic perturbation theory which we briefly review
for the sake of the reader. Moreover, our method allows us to extend the
analysis to certain non-covariant systems having slowly varying magnetic
fields.Comment: 20 pages, no figures. Appendix C added. Final version accepted for
publication in Journal of the European Mathematical Societ
Parseval frames of exponentially localized magnetic Wannier functions
Motivated by the analysis of gapped periodic quantum systems in presence of a
uniform magnetic field in dimension , we study the possibility to
construct spanning sets of exponentially localized (generalized) Wannier
functions for the space of occupied states. When the magnetic flux per unit
cell satisfies a certain rationality condition, by going to the momentum-space
description one can model occupied energy bands by a real-analytic and
-periodic family of
orthogonal projections of rank . A moving orthonormal basis of consisting of real-analytic and -periodic Bloch
vectors can be constructed if and only if the first Chern number(s) of
vanish(es). Here we are mainly interested in the topologically obstructed case.
First, by dropping the generating condition, we show how to algorithmically
construct a collection of orthonormal, real-analytic, and periodic Bloch
vectors. Second, by dropping the linear independence condition, we construct a
Parseval frame of real-analytic and periodic Bloch vectors which generate
. Both algorithms are based on a two-step logarithm
method which produces a moving orthonormal basis in the topologically trivial
case. A moving Parseval frame of analytic, periodic Bloch vectors corresponds
to a Parseval frame of exponentially localized composite Wannier functions. We
extend this construction to the case of magnetic Hamiltonians with an
irrational magnetic flux per unit cell and show how to produce Parseval frames
of exponentially localized generalized Wannier functions also in this setting.
Our results are illustrated in crystalline insulators modelled by discrete
Hofstadter-like Hamiltonians, but apply to certain continuous models of
magnetic Schr\"{o}dinger operators as well.Comment: 40 pages. Improved exposition and minor corrections. Final version
matches published paper on Commun. Math. Phy
Discrete port-controlled Hamiltonian dynamics and average passivation
The paper discusses the modeling and control of port-controlled Hamiltonian dynamics in a pure discrete-time domain. The main result stands in a novel differential-difference representation of discrete port-controlled Hamiltonian systems using the discrete gradient. In these terms, a passive output map is exhibited as well as a passivity based damping controller underlying the natural involvement of discrete-time average passivity
Defect formation in superconducting rings: external fields and finite-size effects
Consistent with the predictions of Kibble and Zurek, scaling behaviour has
been seen in the production of fluxoids during temperature quenches of
superconducting rings. However, deviations from the canonical behaviour arise
because of finite-size effects and stray external fields.
Technical developments, including laser heating and the use of long Josephson
tunnel junctions, have improved the quality of data that can be obtained. With
new experiments in mind we perform large-scale 3D simulations of quenches of
small, thin rings of various geometries with fully dynamical electromagnetic
fields, at nonzero externally applied magnetic flux. We find that the outcomes
are, in practice, indistinguishable from those of much simpler Gaussian
analytical approximations in which the rings are treated as one-dimensional
systems and the magnetic field fluctuation-free.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, presentation at QFS2012, to appear in JLT
Long-term radial-velocity variations of the Sun as a star: The HARPS view
Stellar radial velocities play a fundamental role in the discovery of
extrasolar planets and the measurement of their physical parameters as well as
in the study of stellar physical properties. We investigate the impact of the
solar activity on the radial velocity of the Sun using the HARPS spectrograph
to obtain measurements that can be directly compared with those acquired in the
extrasolar planet search programs. We use the Moon, the Galilean satellites,
and several asteroids as reflectors to measure the radial velocity of the Sun
as a star and correlate it with disc-integrated chromospheric and magnetic
indexes of solar activity that are similar to stellar activity indexes. We
discuss in detail the systematic effects that affect our measurements and the
methods to account for them. We find that the radial velocity of the Sun as a
star is positively correlated with the level of its chromospheric activity at
about 95 percent significance level. The amplitude of the long-term variation
measured in the 2006-2014 period is 4.98 \pm 1.44 m/s, in good agreement with
model predictions. The standard deviation of the residuals obtained by
subtracting a linear best fit is 2.82 m/s and is due to the rotation of the
reflecting bodies and the intrinsic variability of the Sun on timescales
shorter than the activity cycle. A correlation with a lower significance is
detected between the radial velocity and the mean absolute value of the
line-of-sight photospheric magnetic field flux density. Our results confirm
similar correlations found in other late-type main-sequence stars and provide
support to the predictions of radial velocity variations induced by stellar
activity based on current models.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, 1 Appendix; accepted by Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Abundance ratios of red giants in low mass ultra faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies
Low mass dwarf spheroidal galaxies are key objects for our understanding of
the chemical evolution of the pristine Universe and the Local Group of
galaxies. Abundance ratios in stars of these objects can be used to better
understand their star formation and chemical evolution. We report on the
analysis of a sample of 11 stars belonging to 5 different ultra faint dwarf
spheroidal galaxies (UfDSph) based on X-Shooter spectra obtained at the VLT.
Medium resolution spectra have been used to determine the detailed chemical
composition of their atmosphere. We performed a standard 1D LTE analysis to
compute the abundances.
Considering all the stars as representative of the same population of low
mass galaxies, we found that the [alpha/Fe] ratios vs [Fe/H] decreases as the
metallicity of the star increases in a way similar to what is found for the
population of stars belonging to dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The main difference
is that the solar [alpha/Fe] is reached at a much lower metallicity for the
UfDSph than the dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
We report for the first time the abundance of strontium in CVnI. The star we
analyzed in this galaxy has a very high [Sr/Fe] and a very low upper limit of
barium which makes it a star with an exceptionally high [Sr/Ba] ratio.
Our results seem to indicate that the galaxies which have produced the bulk
of their stars before the reionization (fossil galaxies) have lower [X/Fe]
ratios at a given metallicity than the galaxies that have experienced a
discontinuity in their star formation rate (quenching).Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, submitted to A&
Gaussianity revisited: Exploring the Kibble-Zurek mechanism with superconducting rings
In this paper we use spontaneous flux production in annular superconductors
to shed light on the Kibble-Zurek scenario. In particular, we examine the
effects of finite size and external fields, neither of which is directly
amenable to the KZ analysis. Supported by 1D and 3D simulations, the properties
of a superconducting ring are seen to be well represented by analytic Gaussian
approximations which encode the KZ scales indirectly. Experimental results for
annuli in the presence of external fields corroborate these findings.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures; submitted to J. Phys: Condens. Matter for the
special issue 'Condensed Matter Analogues of Cosmology'; v2: considerably
reduced length, incorporation of experimental details into main text,
discussion improved, references added, version accepted for publicatio
Chemical abundances in the nucleus of the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present Iron, Magnesium, Calcium, and Titanium abundances for 235 stars in
the central region of the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy (within 9.0
arcmin ~70 pc from the center) from medium-resolution Keck/DEIMOS spectra. All
the considered stars belong to the massive globular cluster M54 or to the
central nucleus of the galaxy (Sgr,N). In particular we provide abundances for
109 stars with [Fe/H] > -1.0, more than doubling the available sample of
spectroscopic metallicity and alpha-elements abundance estimates for Sgr dSph
stars in this metallicity regime. Also, we find the first confirmed member of
the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal with [Fe/H]< -2.0 based on analysis of iron
lines. We find for the first time a metallicity gradient in the Sgr,N
population, whose peak iron abundance goes from [Fe/H]=-0.38 for R < 2.5 arcmin
to [Fe/H]=-0.57 for 5.0 < R < 9.0 arcmin. On the other hand the trends of
[Mg/Fe], [Ca/Fe], and [Ti/Fe] with [Fe/H] are the same over the entire region
explored by our study. We reproduce the observed chemical patterns of the
Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal as a whole with a chemical evolution model
implying a high mass progenitor ( M_(DM)=6 X 10^{10} Msun ) and a significant
event of mass-stripping occurred a few Gyr ago, presumably starting at the
first peri-Galactic passage after infall.Comment: Accepted for publication to A&A, 12 pages, 14 figures, 1 tabl
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