151 research outputs found
Weak-coupling phase diagrams of bond-aligned and diagonal doped Hubbard ladders
We study, using a perturbative renormalization group technique, the phase
diagrams of bond-aligned and diagonal Hubbard ladders defined as sections of a
square lattice with nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor hopping. We find
that for not too large hole doping and small next-nearest-neighbor hopping the
bond-aligned systems exhibit a fully spin-gapped phase while the diagonal
systems remain gapless. Increasing the next-nearest-neighbor hopping typically
leads to a decrease of the gap in the bond-aligned ladders, and to a transition
into a gapped phase in the diagonal ladders. Embedding the ladders in an
antiferromagnetic environment can lead to a reduction in the extent of the
gapped phases. These findings suggest a relation between the orientation of
hole-rich stripes and superconductivity as observed in LSCO.Comment: Published version. The set of RG equations in the presence of
magnetization was corrected and two figures were replace
Finite temperature spectral function of Mott insulators and CDW States
We calculate the low temperature spectral function of one-dimensional
incommensurate charge density wave (CDW) states and half-filled Mott insulators
(MI). At there are two dispersing features associated with the spin and
charge degrees of freedom respectively. We show that already at very low
temperatures (compared to the gap) one of these features gets severely damped.
We comment on implications of this result for photoemission experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, published versio
Enhancement of the superconducting transition temperature in La2-xSrxCuO4 bilayers: Role of pairing and phase stiffness
The superconducting transition temperature, Tc, of bilayers comprising
underdoped La2-xSrxCuO4 films capped by a thin heavily overdoped metallic
La1.65Sr0.35CuO4 layer, is found to increase with respect to Tc of the bare
underdoped films. The highest Tc is achieved for x = 0.12, close to the
'anomalous' 1/8 doping level, and exceeds that of the optimally-doped bare
film. Our data suggest that the enhanced superconductivity is confined to the
interface between the layers. We attribute the effect to a combination of the
high pairing scale in the underdoped layer with an enhanced phase stiffness
induced by the overdoped film.Comment: Published versio
Boundary Energies and the Geometry of Phase Separation in Double--Exchange Magnets
We calculate the energy of a boundary between ferro- and antiferromagnetic
regions in a phase separated double-exchange magnet in two and three
dimensions. The orientation dependence of this energy can significantly affect
the geometry of the phase-separated state in two dimensions, changing the
droplet shape and possibly stabilizing a striped arrangement within a certain
range of the model parameters. A similar effect, albeit weaker, is also present
in three dimensions. As a result, a phase-separated system near the percolation
threshold is expected to possess intrinsic hysteretic transport properties,
relevant in the context of recent experimental findings.Comment: 6 pages, including 4 figures; expanded versio
Charge and current oscillations in Fractional quantum Hall systems with edges
Stationary solutions of the Chern-Simons effective field theory for the
fractional quantum Hall systems with edges are presented for Hall bar, disk and
annulus. In the infinitely long Hall bar geometry (non compact case), the
charge density is shown to be monotonic inside the sample. In sharp contrast,
spatial oscillatory modes of charge density are found for the two circular
geometries, which indicate that in systems with compact geometry, charge and
current exist also far from the edges.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures Revte
From the Chern-Simons theory for the fractional quantum Hall effect to the Luttinger model of its edges
The chiral Luttinger model for the edges of the fractional quantum Hall
effect is obtained as the low energy limit of the Chern-Simons theory for the
two dimensional system. In particular we recover the Kac-Moody algebra for the
creation and annihilation operators of the edge density waves and the
bosonization formula for the electronic operator at the edge.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 1 Postscript figure include
Generalized Spectral Signatures of Electron Fractionalization in Quasi-One and -Two Dimensional Molybdenum Bronzes and Superconducting Cuprates
We establish the quasi-one-dimensional Li purple bronze as a photoemission
paradigm of Luttinger liquid behavior. We also show that generalized signatures
of electron fractionalization are present in the angle resolved photoemission
spectra for quasi-two-dimensional purple bronzes and certain cuprates. An
important component of our analysis for the quasi-two-dimensional systems is
the proposal of a ``melted holon'' scenario for the k-independent background
that accompanies but does not interact with the peaks that disperse to define
the Fermi surface.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Photoemission Spectroscopy and the Unusually Robust One Dimensional Physics of Lithium Purple Bronze
Temperature dependent photoemission spectroscopy in Li0.9Mo6O17 contributes
to evidence for one dimensional physics that is unusually robust. Three generic
characteristics of the Luttinger liquid are observed, power law behavior of the
k-integrated spectral function down to temperatures just above the
superconducting transition, k-resolved lineshapes that show holon and spinon
features, and quantum critical (QC) scaling in the lineshapes. Departures of
the lineshapes and the scaling from expectations in the Tomonaga Luttinger
model can be partially described by a phenomenological momentum broadening that
is presented and discussed. The possibility that some form of 1d physics
obtains even down to the superconducting transition temperature is assessed.Comment: submitted to JPCM, Special issue article "Physics in one dimension
Coulomb Drag of Edge Excitations in the Chern-Simons Theory of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
Long range Coulomb interaction between the edges of a Hall bar changes the
nature of the gapless edge excitations. Instead of independent modes
propagating in opposite directions on each edge as expected for a short range
interaction one finds elementary excitations living simultaneously on both
edges, i.e. composed of correlated density waves propagating in the same
direction on opposite edges. We discuss the microscopic features of this
Coulomb drag of excitations in the fractional quantum Hall regime within the
framework of the bosonic Chern-Simons Landau-Ginzburg theory. The dispersion
law of these novel excitations is non linear and depends on the distance
between the edges as well as on the current that flows through the sample. The
latter dependence indicates a possibility of parametric excitation of these
modes. The bulk distributions of the density and currents of the edge
excitations differ significantly for short and long range interactions.Comment: 11 pages, REVTEX, 2 uuencoded postscript figure
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