638 research outputs found
The spectral form factor is not self-averaging
The spectral form factor, k(t), is the Fourier transform of the two level
correlation function C(x), which is the averaged probability for finding two
energy levels spaced x mean level spacings apart. The average is over a piece
of the spectrum of width W in the neighborhood of energy E0. An additional
ensemble average is traditionally carried out, as in random matrix theory.
Recently a theoretical calculation of k(t) for a single system, with an energy
average only, found interesting nonuniversal semiclassical effects at times t
approximately unity in units of {Planck's constant) /(mean level spacing). This
is of great interest if k(t) is self-averaging, i.e, if the properties of a
typical member of the ensemble are the same as the ensemble average properties.
We here argue that this is not always the case, and that for many important
systems an ensemble average is essential to see detailed properties of k(t). In
other systems, notably the Riemann zeta function, it is likely possible to see
the properties by an analysis of the spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett., permanent
e-mail address, [email protected]
Sublattice ordering in a dilute ensemble of defects in graphene
Defects in graphene, such as vacancies or adsorbents attaching themselves to
carbons, may preferentially take positions on one of its two sublattices, thus
breaking the global lattice symmetry. This leads to opening a gap in the
electronic spectrum. We show that such a sublattice ordering may spontaneously
occur in a dilute ensemble defects, due to the long-range interaction between
them mediated by electrons. As a result sublattice-ordered domains may form,
with electronic properties characteristic of a two-dimensional topological
insulator.Comment: to appear in Europhysics Letter
Causal Perturbation Theory and Differential Renormalization
In Causal Perturbation Theory the process of renormalization is precisely
equivalent to the extension of time ordered distributions to coincident points.
This is achieved by a modified Taylor subtraction on the corresponding test
functions. I show that the pullback of this operation to the distributions
yields expressions known from Differential Renormalization. The subtraction is
equivalent to BPHZ subtraction in momentum space. Some examples from Euclidean
scalar field theory in flat and curved spacetime will be presented.Comment: 15 pages, AMS-LaTeX, feynm
H_c_3 for a thin-film superconductor with a ferromagnetic dot
We investigate the effect of a ferromagnetic dot on a thin-film
superconductor. We use a real-space method to solve the linearized
Ginzburg-Landau equation in order to find the upper critical field, H_c_3. We
show that H_c_3 is crucially dependent on dot composition and geometry, and may
be significantly greater than H_c_2. H_c_3 is maximally enhanced when (1) the
dot saturation magnetization is large, (2) the ratio of dot thickness to dot
diameter is of order one, and (3) the dot thickness is large
Causal perturbation theory in terms of retarded products, and a proof of the Action Ward Identity
In the framework of perturbative algebraic quantum field theory a local
construction of interacting fields in terms of retarded products is performed,
based on earlier work of Steinmann. In our formalism the entries of the
retarded products are local functionals of the off shell classical fields, and
we prove that the interacting fields depend only on the action and not on terms
in the Lagrangian which are total derivatives, thus providing a proof of
Stora's 'Action Ward Identity'. The theory depends on free parameters which
flow under the renormalization group. This flow can be derived in our local
framework independently of the infrared behavior, as was first established by
Hollands and Wald. We explicitly compute non-trivial examples for the
renormalization of the interaction and the field.Comment: 76 pages, to appear in Rev. Math. Phy
Spectral correlations : understanding oscillatory contributions
We give a different derivation of a relation obtained using a supersymmetric nonlinear sigma model by Andreev and Altshuler [Phys. Rev. Lett. 72, 902 (1995)], which connects smooth and oscillatory components of spectral correlation functions. We show that their result is not specific to the random matrix theory. Also, we show that despite an apparent contradiction, the results obtained using their formula are consistent with earlier perspectives on random matrix models
Quasiclassical Random Matrix Theory
We directly combine ideas of the quasiclassical approximation with random
matrix theory and apply them to the study of the spectrum, in particular to the
two-level correlator. Bogomolny's transfer operator T, quasiclassically an NxN
unitary matrix, is considered to be a random matrix. Rather than rejecting all
knowledge of the system, except for its symmetry, [as with Dyson's circular
unitary ensemble], we choose an ensemble which incorporates the knowledge of
the shortest periodic orbits, the prime quasiclassical information bearing on
the spectrum. The results largely agree with expectations but contain novel
features differing from other recent theories.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett., permanent e-mail
[email protected]
High-frequency transport in -type Si/SiGe heterostructures studied with surface acoustic waves in the quantum Hall regime
The interaction of surface acoustic waves (SAW) with -type
Si/SiGe heterostructures has been studied for SAW frequencies
of 30-300 MHz. For temperatures in the range 0.71.6 K and magnetic fields
up to 7 T, the SAW attenuation coefficient and velocity change were found to oscillate with filling factor. Both the real and
imaginary components of the high-frequency conductivity have been
determined and compared with quasi-dc magnetoresistance measurements at
temperatures down to 33 mK. By analyzing the ratio of to ,
carrier localization can be followed as a function of temperature and magnetic
field. At =0.7 K, the variations of , and
with SAW intensity have been studied and can be explained by heating of the two
dimensional hole gas by the SAW electric field. Energy relaxation is found to
be dominated by acoustic phonon deformation potential scattering with weak
screening.Comment: Accepted for publication in PR
Explicitly solvable cases of one-dimensional quantum chaos
We identify a set of quantum graphs with unique and precisely defined
spectral properties called {\it regular quantum graphs}. Although chaotic in
their classical limit with positive topological entropy, regular quantum graphs
are explicitly solvable. The proof is constructive: we present exact periodic
orbit expansions for individual energy levels, thus obtaining an analytical
solution for the spectrum of regular quantum graphs that is complete, explicit
and exact
Quantum-to-classical crossover of mesoscopic conductance fluctuations
We calculate the system-size-over-wave-length () dependence of
sample-to-sample conductance fluctuations, using the open kicked rotator to
model chaotic scattering in a ballistic quantum dot coupled by two -mode
point contacts to electron reservoirs. Both a fully quantum mechanical and a
semiclassical calculation are presented, and found to be in good agreement. The
mean squared conductance fluctuations reach the universal quantum limit of
random-matrix-theory for small systems. For large systems they increase
at fixed mean dwell time . The universal
quantum fluctuations dominate over the nonuniversal classical fluctuations if
. When expressed as a ratio of time scales, the
quantum-to-classical crossover is governed by the ratio of Ehrenfest time and
ergodic time.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures: one figure added, references update
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