8,861 research outputs found
Orbital Properties of Sr3Ru2O7 and Related Ruthenates Probed by 17O-NMR
We report a site-separated O-NMR study of the layered perovskite
ruthenate SrRuO, which exhibits nearly two-dimensional transport
properties and itinerant metamagnetism at low temperatures. The local hole
occupancies and the spin densities in the oxygen orbitals are obtained by
means of tight-binding analyses of electric field gradients and anisotropic
Knight shifts. These quantities are compared with two other layered perovskite
ruthenates: the two-dimensional paramagnet SrRuO and the
three-dimensional ferromagnet SrRuO. The hole occupancies at the oxygen
sites are very large, about one hole per ruthenium atom. This is due to the
strong covalent character of the Ru-O bonding in this compound. The magnitude
of the hole occupancy might be related to the rotation or tilt of the RuO
octahedra. The spin densities at the oxygen sites are also large, 20-40% of the
bulk susceptibilities, but in contrast to the hole occupancies, the spin
densities strongly depend on the dimensionality. This result suggests that the
density-of-states at the oxygen sites plays an essential role for the
understanding of the complex magnetism found in the layered perovskite
ruthenates.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Quantum System under Periodic Perturbation: Effect of Environment
In many physical situations the behavior of a quantum system is affected by
interaction with a larger environment. We develop, using the method of
influence functional, how to deduce the density matrix of the quantum system
incorporating the effect of environment. After introducing characterization of
the environment by spectral weight, we first devise schemes to approximate the
spectral weight, and then a perturbation method in field theory models, in
order to approximately describe the environment. All of these approximate
models may be classified as extended Ohmic models of dissipation whose
differences are in the high frequency part.
The quantum system we deal with in the present work is a general class of
harmonic oscillators with arbitrary time dependent frequency. The late time
behavior of the system is well described by an approximation that employs a
localized friction in the dissipative part of the correlation function
appearing in the influence functional. The density matrix of the quantum system
is then determined in terms of a single classical solution obtained with the
time dependent frequency. With this one can compute the entropy, the energy
distribution function, and other physical quantities of the system in a closed
form.
Specific application is made to the case of periodically varying frequency.
This dynamical system has a remarkable property when the environmental
interaction is switched off: Effect of the parametric resonance gives rise to
an exponential growth of the populated number in higher excitation levels, or
particle production in field theory models. The effect of the environment is
investigated for this dynamical system and it is demonstrated that there existsComment: 55 pages, LATEX file plus 13 PS figures. A few calculational
mistatkes and corresponding figure 1 in field theory model corrected and some
changes made for publication in Phys. Rev.D (in press
New Kinetic Equation for Pair-annihilating Particles: Generalization of the Boltzmann Equation
A convenient form of kinetic equation is derived for pair annihilation of
heavy stable particles relevant to the dark matter problem in cosmology. The
kinetic equation thus derived extends the on-shell Boltzmann equation in a most
straightforward way, including the off-shell effect. A detailed balance
equation for the equilibrium abundance is further analyzed. Perturbative
analysis of this equation supports a previous result for the equilibrium
abundance using the thermal field theory, and gives the temperature power
dependence of equilibrium value at low temperatures. Estimate of the relic
abundance is possible using this new equilibrium abundance in the sudden
freeze-out approximation.Comment: 19 pages, LATEX file with 2 PS figure
Analytic models for mechanotransduction: gating a mechanosensitive channel
Analytic estimates for the forces and free energy generated by bilayer
deformation reveal a compelling and intuitive model for MscL channel gating
analogous to the nucleation of a second phase. We argue that the competition
between hydrophobic mismatch and tension results in a surprisingly rich story
which can provide both a quantitative comparison to measurements of opening
tension for MscL when reconstituted in bilayers of different thickness and
qualitative insights into the function of the MscL channel and other
transmembrane proteins
Multi-site breathers in Klein-Gordon lattices: stability, resonances, and bifurcations
We prove the most general theorem about spectral stability of multi-site
breathers in the discrete Klein-Gordon equation with a small coupling constant.
In the anti-continuum limit, multi-site breathers represent excited
oscillations at different sites of the lattice separated by a number of "holes"
(sites at rest). The theorem describes how the stability or instability of a
multi-site breather depends on the phase difference and distance between the
excited oscillators. Previously, only multi-site breathers with adjacent
excited sites were considered within the first-order perturbation theory. We
show that the stability of multi-site breathers with one-site holes change for
large-amplitude oscillations in soft nonlinear potentials. We also discover and
study a symmetry-breaking (pitchfork) bifurcation of one-site and multi-site
breathers in soft quartic potentials near the points of 1:3 resonance.Comment: 34 pages, 12 figure
Coherence-Incoherence and Dimensional Crossover in Layered Strongly Correlated Metals
Correlations between electrons and the effective dimensionality are crucial
factors that shape the properties of an interacting electron system. For
example, the onsite Coulomb repulsion, U, may inhibit, or completely block the
intersite electron hopping, t, and depending on the ratio U/t, a material may
be a metal or an insulator. The correlation effects increase as the number of
allowed dimensions decreases. In 3D systems, the low energy electronic states
behave as quasiparticles (QP), while in 1D systems, even weak interactions
break the quasiparticles into collective excitations. Dimensionality is
particularly important for a class of new exotic low-dimensional materials
where 1D or 2D building blocks are loosely connected into a 3D whole. Small
interactions between the blocks may induce a whole variety of unusual
transitions. Here, we examine layered systems that in the direction
perpendicular to the layers display a crossover from insulating-like, at high
temperatures, to metallic-like character at low temperatures, while being
metallic over the whole temperature range within the layers. We show that this
change in effective dimensionality correlates with the existence or
non-existence of coherent quasiparticles within the layers
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