7,360 research outputs found
A chemical model for lunar non-mare rocks
Nearly all rocks returned from the moon are readily divided into three broad categories on the basis of their chemical compositions: (1) mare basalts, (2) non-mare rocks of basaltic composition (KREEP, VHA), and (3) anorthositic rocks. Only mare basalts may unambiguously be considered to have original igneous textures and are widely understood to have an igneous origin. Nearly all other lunar rocks have lost their original textures during metamorphic and impact processes. For these rocks one must work primarily with chemical data in order to recognize and define rock groups and their possible modes of origin. Non-mare rocks of basaltic composition have chemical compositions consistent with an origin by partial melting of the lunar interior. The simplest origin for rocks of anorthositic chemical composition is the crystallization and removal of ferromagnesian minerals. It is proposed that the rock groups of anorthositic and non-mare basaltic chemical composition could have been generated from a single series of original, but not necessarily primitive, lunar materials
A chemical model for lunar non-mare rocks
Nearly all rocks returned from the moon are readily divided into three broad categories on the basis of their chemical compositions: (1) mare basalts, (2) non-mare rocks of basaltic composition (KREEP, VHA), and (3) anorthositic rocks. Only mare basalts may unambiguously be considered to have original igneous textures and are widely understood to have an igneous origin. Nearly all other lunar rocks have lost their original textures during metamorphic and impact processes. It is shown that for these rocks one must work primarily with chemical data in order to recognize and define rock groups and their possible modes of origin. Non-mare rocks of basaltic composition have chemical compositions consistent with an origin by partial melting of the lunar interior. The simplest origin for rocks of anorthositic chemical composition is the crystallization and removal of ferromagnesian minerals. It is proposed that the rock groups of anorthositic and non-mare basaltic chemical composition could have been generated from a single series of original but not necessarily primitive lunar materials
Report of Workshop on Methodology for Evaluating Potential Lunar Resources Sites
The type and quantity of lunar materials needed to support a space power satellite program was used to define the type and quality of geological information required to certify a site for exploitation. The existing geological, geochemical, and geophysical data are summarized. The difference between these data and the required data for exploitation is used to define program requirements. Most of these requirements involve linear extensions of existing capabilities, fuller utilization of existing data, or expanded use of automated systems
Compressibility of the Two-Dimensional infinite-U Hubbard Model
We study the interactions between the coherent quasiparticles and the
incoherent Mott-Hubbard excitations and their effects on the low energy
properties in the Hubbard model. Within the framework of a
systematic large-N expansion, these effects first occur in the next to leading
order in 1/N. We calculate the scattering phase shift and the free energy, and
determine the quasiparticle weight Z, mass renormalization, and the
compressibility. It is found that the compressibility is strongly renormalized
and diverges at a critical doping . We discuss the nature
of this zero-temperature phase transition and its connection to phase
separation and superconductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Low-energy excitations of the one-dimensional half-filled SU(4) Hubbard model with an attractive on-site interaction: Density-matrix renormalization-group calculations and perturbation theory
We investigate low-energy excitations of the one-dimensional half-filled
SU(4) Hubbard model with an attractive on-site interaction U < 0 using the
density matrix renormalization group method as well as a perturbation theory.
We find that the ground state is a charge density wave state with a long range
order. The ground state is completely incompressible since all the excitations
are gapful. The charge gap which is the same as the four-particle excitation
gap is a non-monotonic function of U, while the spin gap and others increase
with increasing |U| and have linear asymptotic behaviors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitte
Slow-string limit and "antiferromagnetic" state in AdS/CFT
We discuss a slow-moving limit of a rigid circular equal-spin solution on R x
S^3. We suggest that the solution with the winding number equal to the total
spin approximates the quantum string state dual to the maximal-dimension
``antiferromagnetic'' state of the SU(2) spin chain on the gauge theory side.
An expansion of the string action near this solution leads to a weakly coupled
system of a sine-Gordon model and a free field. We show that a similar
effective Hamiltonian appears in a certain continuum limit from the half-filled
Hubbard model that was recently suggested to describe the all-order dilatation
operator of the dual gauge theory in the SU(2) sector. We also discuss some
other slow-string solutions with one spin component in AdS_5 and one in S^5.Comment: 32 pages, Latex v2: one footnote and references adde
A strong-coupling expansion for the Hubbard model
We reconsider the strong-coupling expansion for the Hubbard model recently
introduced by Sarker and Pairault {\it et al.} By introducing slave particles
that act as projection operators onto the empty, singly occupied and doubly
occupied atomic states, the perturbation theory around the atomic limit
distinguishes between processes that do conserve or do not conserve the total
number of doubly occupied sites. This allows for a systematic expansion
that does not break down at low temperature ( being the intersite hopping
amplitude and the local Coulomb repulsion). The fermionic field becomes a
two-component field, which reflects the presence of the two Hubbard bands. The
single-particle propagator is naturally expressed as a function of a matrix self-energy. Furthermore, by introducing a time- and
space-fluctuating spin-quantization axis in the functional integral, we can
expand around a ``non-degenerate'' ground-state where each singly occupied site
has a well defined spin direction (which may fluctuate in time). This formalism
is used to derive the effective action of charge carriers in the lower Hubbard
band to first order in . We recover the action of the t-J model in the
spin-hole coherent-state path integral. We also compare our results with those
previously obtained by studying fluctuations around the large- Hartree-Fock
saddle point.Comment: 20 pages RevTex, 3 figure
Metal-Insulator transition in the Generalized Hubbard model
We present the exact ground-state wave function and energy of the generalized
Hubbard model, subjected to the condition that the number of double occupied
sites is conserved, for a wide, physically relevant range of parameters. For
one hole and one double occupied site the existence of the ferromagnetic
ground-state is proved which allow one to determine the critical value of the
on-site repulsion corresponding to the point of metal-insulator transition. For
the one dimensional model the exact solution for special values of the
parameters is obtained.Comment: 20 pages, LaTex. Mod.Phys.Lett.B 7 (1993) 1397; Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matter (to appear
Exact Solution of a Electron System Combining Two Different t-J Models
A new strongly correlated electron model is presented. This is formed by two
types of sites: one where double occupancy is forbidden, as in the t-J model,
and the other where double occupancy is allowed but vacancy is not allowed, as
an inverse t-J model. The Hamiltonian shows nearest and next-to-nearest
neighbour interactions and it is solved by means of a modified algebraic nested
Bethe Ansatz. The number of sites where vacancy is not allowed, may be treated
as a new parameter if the model is looked at as a t-J model with impurities.
The ground and excited states are described in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: Some corrections and references added. To be published in J. Phys.
Effective band-structure in the insulating phase versus strong dynamical correlations in metallic VO2
Using a general analytical continuation scheme for cluster dynamical mean
field calculations, we analyze real-frequency self-energies, momentum-resolved
spectral functions, and one-particle excitations of the metallic and insulating
phases of VO2. While for the former dynamical correlations and lifetime effects
prevent a description in terms of quasi-particles, the excitations of the
latter allow for an effective band-structure. We construct an
orbital-dependent, but static one-particle potential that reproduces the full
many-body spectrum. Yet, the ground state is well beyond a static one-particle
description. The emerging picture gives a non-trivial answer to the decade-old
question of the nature of the insulator, which we characterize as a ``many-body
Peierls'' state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 color figure
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