934 research outputs found

    Boundary conditions at the mobility edge

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    It is shown that the universal behavior of the spacing distribution of nearest energy levels at the metal--insulator Anderson transition is indeed dependent on the boundary conditions. The spectral rigidity Σ2(E)\Sigma^2(E) also depends on the boundary conditions but this dependence vanishes at high energy EE. This implies that the multifractal exponent D2D_2 of the participation ratio of wave functions in the bulk is not affected by the boundary conditions.Comment: 4 pages of revtex, new figures, new abstract, the text has been changed: The large energy behavior of the number variance has been found to be independent of the boundary condition

    Many-body spectral statistics of interacting fermions

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    Thermodynamics and Transport in Mesoscopic Disordered Networks

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    We describe the effects of phase coherence on transport and thermodynamic properties of a disordered conducting network. In analogy with weak-localization correction, we calculate the phase coherence contribution to the magnetic response of mesoscopic metallic isolated networks. It is related to the return probability for a diffusive particle on the corresponding network. By solving the diffusion equation on various types of networks, including a ring with arms, an infinite square network or a chain of connected rings, we deduce the magnetic response. As it is the case for transport properties --weak-localization corrections or universal conductance fluctuations-- the magnetic response can be written in term of a single function S called spectral function which is related to the spatial average of the return probability on the network. We have found that the magnetization of an ensemble of CONNECTED rings is of the same order of magnitude as if the rings were disconnected.Comment: Proceedings of Minerva Workshop on Mesoscopics, Fractals and Neural Networks, Eilat, March 1997, 13 pages, RevTeX, 2 figure

    Error Estimates on Parton Density Distributions

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    Error estimates on parton density distributions are presently based on the traditional method of least squares minimisation and linear error propagation in global QCD fits. We review the underlying assumptions and the various mathematical representations of the method and address some technical issues encountered in such a global analysis. Parton distribution sets which contain error information are described.Comment: Latex, 12 pages, 5 figures. Needs iopart.cls and iopart12.clo. Presented at New Trends in HERA Physics 2001, Ringberg Castle, Tegernsee, Germany, June 17-22, 200

    Transmission through quantum networks

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    We propose a simple formalism to calculate the conductance of any quantum network made of one-dimensional quantum wires. We apply this method to analyze, for two periodic systems, the modulation of this conductance with respect to the magnetic field. We also study the influence of an elastic disorder on the periodicity of the AB oscillations and we show that a recently proposed localization mechanism induced by the magnetic field resists to such a perturbation. Finally, we discuss the relevance of this approach for the understanding of a recent experiment on GaAs/GaAlAs networks.Comment: 4 pages, 5 EPS figure

    Possibility of long-range order in clean mesoscopic cylinders

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    A microscopic Hamiltonian of the magnetostatic interaction is discussed. This long-range interaction can play an important role in mesoscopic systems leading to an ordered ground state. The self-consistent mean field approximation of the magnetostatic interaction is performed to give an effective Hamiltonian from which the spontaneous, self-sustaining currents can be obtained. To go beyond the mean field approximation the mean square fluctuation of the total momentum is calculated and its influence on self-sustaining currents in mesoscopic cylinders with quasi-1D and quasi-2D conduction is considered. Then, by the use of the microscopic Hamiltonian of the magnetostatic interaction for a set of stacked rings, the problem of long-range order is discussed. The temperature TT^{*} below which the system is in an ordered state is determined.Comment: 14 pages, REVTeX, 5 figures, in print in Phys. Rev.
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