1,219 research outputs found
Rocking motion induced charging of C60 on h-BN/Ni(111)
One monolayer of C60 on one monolayer of hexagonal boron nitride on nickel is
investigated by photoemission. Between 150 and 250 K the work function
decreases and the binding energy of the highest occupied molecular orbital
(HOMO) increases by approx. 100 meV. In parallel, the occupancy of the, in the
cold state almost empty, lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) changes by
0.4 electrons. This charge redistribution is triggered by onset of molecular
rocking motion, i.e. by orientation dependent tunneling between the LUMO of C60
and the substrate. The magnitude of the charge transfer is large and cannot be
explained within a single particle picture. It is proposed to involve
electron-phonon coupling where C60- polaron formation leads to electron
self-trapping.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Negative-Energy Spinors and the Fock Space of Lattice Fermions at Finite Chemical Potential
Recently it was suggested that the problem of species doubling with
Kogut-Susskind lattice fermions entails, at finite chemical potential, a
confusion of particles with antiparticles. What happens instead is that the
familiar correspondence of positive-energy spinors to particles, and of
negative-energy spinors to antiparticles, ceases to hold for the Kogut-Susskind
time derivative. To show this we highlight the role of the spinorial ``energy''
in the Osterwalder-Schrader reconstruction of the Fock space of non-interacting
lattice fermions at zero temperature and nonzero chemical potential. We
consider Kogut-Susskind fermions and, for comparison, fermions with an
asymmetric one-step time derivative.Comment: 14p
Algebraic Quantum Theory on Manifolds: A Haag-Kastler Setting for Quantum Geometry
Motivated by the invariance of current representations of quantum gravity
under diffeomorphisms much more general than isometries, the Haag-Kastler
setting is extended to manifolds without metric background structure. First,
the causal structure on a differentiable manifold M of arbitrary dimension
(d+1>2) can be defined in purely topological terms, via cones (C-causality).
Then, the general structure of a net of C*-algebras on a manifold M and its
causal properties required for an algebraic quantum field theory can be
described as an extension of the Haag-Kastler axiomatic framework.
An important application is given with quantum geometry on a spatial slice
within the causally exterior region of a topological horizon H, resulting in a
net of Weyl algebras for states with an infinite number of intersection points
of edges and transversal (d-1)-faces within any neighbourhood of the spatial
boundary S^2.Comment: 15 pages, Latex; v2: several corrections, in particular in def. 1 and
in sec.
Continuum Limit of Spin Models with Continuous Symmetry and Conformal Quantum Field Theory
According to the standard classification of Conformal Quantum Field Theory
(CQFT) in two dimensions, the massless continuum limit of the model at
the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) transition point should be given by the massless
free scalar field; in particular the Noether current of the model should be
proportional to (the dual of) the gradient of the massless free scalar field,
reflecting a symmetry enhanced from to . More
generally, the massless continuum limit of a spin model with a symmetry given
by a Lie group should have an enhanced symmetry . We point out
that the arguments leading to this conclusion contain two serious gaps: i) the
possibility of `nontrivial local cohomology' and ii) the possibility that the
current is an ultralocal field. For the model we give analytic
arguments which rule out the first possibility and use numerical methods to
dispose of the second one. We conclude that the standard CQFT predictions
appear to be borne out in the model, but give an example where they
would fail. We also point out that all our arguments apply equally well to any
symmetric spin model, provided it has a critical point at a finite
temperature.Comment: 19 page
Inequalities for trace anomalies, length of the RG flow, distance between the fixed points and irreversibility
I discuss several issues about the irreversibility of the RG flow and the
trace anomalies c, a and a'. First I argue that in quantum field theory: i) the
scheme-invariant area Delta(a') of the graph of the effective beta function
between the fixed points defines the length of the RG flow; ii) the minimum of
Delta(a') in the space of flows connecting the same UV and IR fixed points
defines the (oriented) distance between the fixed points; iii) in even
dimensions, the distance between the fixed points is equal to
Delta(a)=a_UV-a_IR. In even dimensions, these statements imply the inequalities
0 =< Delta(a)=< Delta(a') and therefore the irreversibility of the RG flow.
Another consequence is the inequality a =< c for free scalars and fermions (but
not vectors), which can be checked explicitly. Secondly, I elaborate a more
general axiomatic set-up where irreversibility is defined as the statement that
there exist no pairs of non-trivial flows connecting interchanged UV and IR
fixed points. The axioms, based on the notions of length of the flow, oriented
distance between the fixed points and certain "oriented-triangle inequalities",
imply the irreversibility of the RG flow without a global a function. I
conjecture that the RG flow is irreversible also in odd dimensions (without a
global a function). In support of this, I check the axioms of irreversibility
in a class of d=3 theories where the RG flow is integrable at each order of the
large N expansion.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures; expanded intro, improved presentation,
references added - CQ
Femtosecond manipulation of spins, charges, and ions in nanostructures, thin films, and surfaces
Modern ultrafast techniques provide new insights into the dynamics of ions, charges, and spins in photoexcited nanostructures. In this review, we describe the use of time-resolved electron-based methods to address specific questions such as the ordering properties of self-assembled nanoparticles supracrystals, the interplay between electronic and structural dynamics in surfaces and adsorbate layers, the light-induced control of collective electronic modes in nanowires and thin films, and the real-space/real-time evolution of the skyrmion lattice in topological magnets
AdS/CFT correspondence in the Euclidean context
We study two possible prescriptions for AdS/CFT correspondence by means of
functional integrals. The considerations are non-perturbative and reveal
certain divergencies which turn out to be harmless, in the sense that
reflection-positivity and conformal invariance are not destroyed.Comment: 20 pages, references and two remarks adde
Instantons of M(atrix) Theory in PP-Wave Background
M(atrix) theory in PP-wave background possesses a discrete set of classical
vacua, all of which preserves 16 supersymmetry and interpretable as collection
of giant gravitons. We find Euclidean instanton solutions that interpolate
between them, and analyze their properties. Supersymmetry prevents direct
mixing between different vacua but still allows effect of instanton to show up
in higher order effective interactions, such as analog of v^4 interaction of
flat space effective theory. An explicit construction of zero modes is
performed, and Goldstone zero modes, bosonic and fermionic, are identified. We
further generalize this to massive M(atrix) theory that includes fundamental
hypermultiplets, corresponding to insertion of longitudinal fivebranes in the
background. After a brief comparison to their counterpart in AdS\times S, we
close with a summary.Comment: 25 pages, LaTeX, references added, section 5 update
Quark confinement and the bosonic string
Using a new type of simulation algorithm for the standard SU(3) lattice gauge
theory that yields results with unprecedented precision, we confirm the
presence of a correction to the static quark potential at large
distances , with a coefficient as predicted by the bosonic string
theory. In both three and four dimensions, the transition from perturbative to
string behaviour is evident from the data and takes place at surprisingly small
distances.Comment: TeX source, 21 pages, figures include
Functional Integral Construction of the Thirring model: axioms verification and massless limit
We construct a QFT for the Thirring model for any value of the mass in a
functional integral approach, by proving that a set of Grassmann integrals
converges, as the cutoffs are removed and for a proper choice of the bare
parameters, to a set of Schwinger functions verifying the Osterwalder-Schrader
axioms. The corresponding Ward Identities have anomalies which are not linear
in the coupling and which violate the anomaly non-renormalization property.
Additional anomalies are present in the closed equation for the interacting
propagator, obtained by combining a Schwinger-Dyson equation with Ward
Identities.Comment: 55 pages, 9 figure
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