5,234 research outputs found
Universal properties of hard-core bosons confined on one-dimensional lattices
Based on an exact treatment of hard-core bosons confined on one-dimensional
lattices, we obtain the large distance behavior of the one-particle density
matrix, and show how it determines the occupation of the lowest natural orbital
in the thermodynamic limit. We also study the occupation of
the natural orbitals for large- at low densities. Both quantities show
universal behavior independently of the confining potential. Finite-size
corrections and the momentum distribution function for finite systems are also
analyzed.Comment: Revtex file, 5 pages, 5 figures. Content and references added.
Published versio
Gauge Theory for a Doped Antiferromagnet in a Rotating Reference-Frame
We study a doped antiferromagnet (AF) using a rotating reference-frame.
Whereas in the laboratory reference-frame with a globally fixed
spin-quantization axis (SQA) the long-wavelength, low-energy physics is given
by the O(3) non-linear -model with current-current interactions between
the fermionic degrees of freedom and the order-parameter field for the
spin-background, an alternative description in form of an U(1) gauge theory can
be derived by choosing the SQA defined by the local direction of the
order-parameter field via a SU(2) rotation of the fermionic spinor. Within a
large- expansion of this U(1) gauge theory we obtain the phase diagram for
the doped AF and identify the relevant terms due to doping that lead to a
quantum phase transition at from the antiferromagnetically ordered N\'eel
phase to the quantum-disordered (QD) spin-liquid phase. Furthermore, we
calculate the propagator of the corresponding U(1) gauge field, which mediates
a long-range transverse interaction between the bosonic and fermionic fields.
It is found that the strength of the propagator is proportional to the gap of
the spin-excitations. Therefore, we expect as a consequence of this long-range
interaction the formation of bound states when the spin-gap opens, i.e.\ in the
QD spin-liquid phase. The possible bound states are spin-waves with a (spin-)
gap in the excitation spectrum, spinless fermions and pairs of fermions. Thus,
an alternative picture for charge-spin separation emerges, with composite
charge-separated excitations. Moreover, the present treatment shows an intimate
connection between the opening of the spin-gap and charge-spin separation as
well as pairing.Comment: 13 pages, also available at
http://www.physik.uni-augsburg.de/theo2/Publications
Quantum disordered phase in a doped antiferromagnet
A quantitative description of the transition to a quantum disordered phase in
a doped antiferromagnet is obtained with a U(1) gauge-theory, where the gap in
the spin-wave spectrum determines the strength of the gauge-fields. They
mediate an attractive long-range interaction whose possible bound-states
correspond to charge-spin separation and pairing.Comment: 11 pages, LaTex, chris-preprint-1994-
Phase diagram of the three-dimensional Hubbard model at half filling
We investigate the phase diagram of the three-dimensional Hubbard model at
half filling using quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations. The antiferromagnetic
Neel temperature T_N is determined from the specific heat maximum in
combination with finite-size scaling of the magnetic structure factor. Our
results interpolate smoothly between the asymptotic solutions for weak and
strong coupling, respectively, in contrast to previous QMC simulations. The
location of the metal-insulator transition in the paramagnetic phase above T_N
is determined using the electronic compressibility as criterion.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to be published in Eur. Phys. J. B (2000
Quantum Monte Carlo study of confined fermions in one-dimensional optical lattices
Using quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations we study the ground-state
properties of the one-dimensional fermionic Hubbard model in traps with an
underlying lattice. Since due to the confining potential the density is space
dependent, Mott-insulating domains always coexist with metallic regions, such
that global quantities are not appropriate to describe the system. We define a
local compressibility that characterizes the Mott-insulating regions and
analyze other local quantities. It is shown that the momentum distribution
function, a quantity that is commonly considered in experiments, fails in
giving a clear signal of the Mott-insulator transition. Furthermore, we analyze
a mean-field approach to these systems and compare it with the numerically
exact QMC results. Finally, we determine a generic form for the phase diagram
that allows us to predict the phases to be observed in the experiments.Comment: RevTex file, 13 pages, 19 figures, published versio
Cooperative effect of phonons and electronic correlations for superconductivity in cobaltates
We propose that unconventional superconductivity in hydrated sodium cobaltate
results from an interplay of electronic correlations and
electron-phonon interactions. On the basis of the model plus phonons we
found evidences for a) unconventional superconductivity, b) realistic values of
and c) the dome shape existing near . This picture is
obtained for close to the critical Coulomb repulsion which separates
the uniform Fermi liquid from CDW ordered phase.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Supersolids in confined fermions on one-dimensional optical lattices
Using quantum Monte Carlo simulations, we show that density-density and
pairing correlation functions of the one-dimensional attractive fermionic
Hubbard model in a harmonic confinement potential are characterized by the
anomalous dimension of a corresponding periodic system, and hence
display quantum critical behavior. The corresponding fluctuations render the
SU(2) symmetry breaking by the confining potential irrelevant, leading to
structure form factors for both correlation functions that scale with the same
exponent upon increasing the system size, thus giving rise to a
(quasi)supersolid.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Counterflow Extension for the F.A.S.T.-Model
The F.A.S.T. (Floor field and Agent based Simulation Tool) model is a
microscopic model of pedestrian dynamics, which is discrete in space and time.
It was developed in a number of more or less consecutive steps from a simple CA
model. This contribution is a summary of a study on an extension of the
F.A.S.T-model for counterflow situations. The extensions will be explained and
it will be shown that the extended F.A.S.T.-model is capable of handling
various counterflow situations and to reproduce the well known lane formation
effect.Comment: Contribution to Crowds and Cellular Automata Workshop 2008. Accepted
for publication in "Cellular Automata -- 8th International Conference on
Cellular Automata for Research and Industry, ACRI 2008, Yokohama, Japan,
September 23-26, Springer 2008, Proceedings
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