13,437 research outputs found
Thermodynamic properties of the one-dimensional Kondo insulators studied by the density matrix renormalization group method
Thermodynamic properties of the one-dimensional Kondo lattice model at
half-filling are studied by the density matrix renormalization group method
applied to the quantum transfer matrix. Spin susceptibility, charge
susceptibility, and specific heat are calculated down to T=0.1t for various
exchange constants. The obtained results clearly show crossover behavior from
the high temperature regime of nearly independent localized spins and
conduction electrons to the low temperature regime where the two degrees of
freedom couple strongly. The low temperature energy scales of the charge and
spin susceptibilities are determined and shown to be equal to the quasiparticle
gap and the spin gap, respectively, for weak exchange couplings.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures, REVTeX, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Thermodynamics of doped Kondo insulator in one dimension: Finite Temperature DMRG Study
The finite-temperature density-matrix renormalization-group method is applied
to the one-dimensional Kondo lattice model near half filling to study its
thermodynamics. The spin and charge susceptibilities and entropy are calculated
down to T=0.03t. We find two crossover temperatures near half filling. The
higher crossover temperature continuously connects to the spin gap at half
filling, and the susceptibilities are suppressed around this temperature. At
low temperatures, the susceptibilities increase again with decreasing
temperature when doping is finite. We confirm that they finally approach to the
values obtained in the Tomonaga-Luttinger (TL) liquid ground state for several
parameters. The crossover temperature to the TL liquid is a new energy scale
determined by gapless excitations of the TL liquid. The transition from the
metallic phase to the insulating phase is accompanied by the vanishing of the
lower crossover temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 7 Postscript figures, REVTe
Lorentz Covariance and the Dimensional Crossover of 2d-Antiferromagnets
We derive a lattice -function for the 2d-Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg
model, which allows the lattice interaction couplings of the nonperturbative
Quantum Monte Carlo vacuum to be related directly to the zero-temperature fixed
points of the nonlinear sigma model in the presence of strong interplanar and
spin anisotropies. In addition to the usual renormalization of the gapful
disordered state in the vicinity of the quantum critical point, we show that
this leads to a chiral doubling of the spectra of excited states
Possible explanation for star-crushing effect in binary neutron star simulations
A possible explanation is suggested for the controversial star-crushing
effect seen in numerical simulations of inspiraling neutron star binaries by
Wilson, Mathews and Marronetti (WMM). An apparently incorrect definition of
momentum density in the momentum constraint equation used by WMM gives rise to
a post-1-Newtonian error in the approximation scheme. We show by means of an
analytic, post-1-Newtonian calculation that this error causes an increase of
the stars' central densities which is of the order of several percent when the
stars are separated by a few stellar radii, in agreement with what is seen in
the simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, uses revetx macros, minor revision
Statistical Aspects of Model Selection
Various aspects of statistical model selection are discussed from the view point of a statistician. Our concern here is about selection procedures based on the Kullback Leibler information number. Derivation of AIC (Akaike's Information Criterion) is given. As a result a natural extension of AIC, called TIC (Takeuchi's Information Criterion) follows. It is shown that the TIC is asymptotically equivalent to Cross Validation in a general context, although AIC is asymptotically equivalent only for the case of independent identically distributed observations. Next, the maximum penalized likelihood estimate is considered in place of the maximum likelihood estimate as an estimation of parameters after a model is selected. Then the weight of penalty is also the one to be selected. We will show that, starting from the same Kullback-Leibler information number, a useful criterion RIC (Regularization Information Criterion) is derived to select both the model and the weight of penalty. This criterion is in fact an extension of TIC as well, as of AIC. Comparison of various criteria, including consistency and efficiency is summarized in Section 5. Applications of such criteria to time series models are given in the last section
Merger of binary neutron stars of unequal mass in full general relativity
We present results of three dimensional numerical simulations of the merger
of unequal-mass binary neutron stars in full general relativity. A -law
equation of state is adopted, where , ,
\varep, and are the pressure, rest mass density, specific internal
energy, and the adiabatic constant, respectively. We take and the
baryon rest-mass ratio to be in the range 0.85--1. The typical grid size
is for . We improve several implementations since the
latest work. In the present code, the radiation reaction of gravitational waves
is taken into account with a good accuracy. This fact enables us to follow the
coalescence all the way from the late inspiral phase through the merger phase
for which the transition is triggered by the radiation reaction. It is found
that if the total rest-mass of the system is more than times of the
maximum allowed rest-mass of spherical neutron stars, a black hole is formed
after the merger irrespective of the mass ratios. The gravitational waveforms
and outcomes in the merger of unequal-mass binaries are compared with those in
equal-mass binaries. It is found that the disk mass around the so formed black
holes increases with decreasing rest-mass ratios and decreases with increasing
compactness of neutron stars. The merger process and the gravitational
waveforms also depend strongly on the rest-mass ratios even for the range --1.Comment: 32 pages, PRD68 to be publishe
Gravitational waves from axisymmetrically oscillating neutron stars in general relativistic simulations
Gravitational waves from oscillating neutron stars in axial symmetry are
studied performing numerical simulations in full general relativity. Neutron
stars are modeled by a polytropic equation of state for simplicity. A
gauge-invariant wave extraction method as well as a quadrupole formula are
adopted for computation of gravitational waves. It is found that the
gauge-invariant variables systematically contain numerical errors generated
near the outer boundaries in the present axisymmetric computation. We clarify
their origin, and illustrate it possible to eliminate the dominant part of the
systematic errors. The best corrected waveforms for oscillating and rotating
stars currently contain errors of magnitude in the local wave
zone. Comparing the waveforms obtained by the gauge-invariant technique with
those by the quadrupole formula, it is shown that the quadrupole formula yields
approximate gravitational waveforms besides a systematic underestimation of the
amplitude of where and denote the mass and the radius of
neutron stars. However, the wave phase and modulation of the amplitude can be
computed accurately. This indicates that the quadrupole formula is a useful
tool for studying gravitational waves from rotating stellar core collapse to a
neutron star in fully general relativistic simulations. Properties of the
gravitational waveforms from the oscillating and rigidly rotating neutron stars
are also addressed paying attention to the oscillation associated with
fundamental modes
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