17,179 research outputs found
Solving Dirac equations on a 3D lattice with inverse Hamiltonian and spectral methods
A new method to solve the Dirac equation on a 3D lattice is proposed, in
which the variational collapse problem is avoided by the inverse Hamiltonian
method and the fermion doubling problem is avoided by performing spatial
derivatives in momentum space with the help of the discrete Fourier transform,
i.e., the spectral method. This method is demonstrated in solving the Dirac
equation for a given spherical potential in 3D lattice space. In comparison
with the results obtained by the shooting method, the differences in single
particle energy are smaller than ~MeV, and the densities are almost
identical, which demonstrates the high accuracy of the present method. The
results obtained by applying this method without any modification to solve the
Dirac equations for an axial deformed, non-axial deformed, and octupole
deformed potential are provided and discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
Possibility of Unconventional Pairing Due to Coulomb Interaction in Fe-Based Pnictide Superconductors: Perturbative Analysis of Multi-Band Hubbard Models
Possibility of unconventional pairing due to Coulomb interaction in
iron-pnictide superconductors is studied by applying a perturbative approach to
realistic 2- and 5-band Hubbard models. The linearized Eliashberg equation is
solved by expanding the effective pairing interaction perturbatively up to
third order in the on-site Coulomb integrals. The numerical results for the
5-band model suggest that the eigenvalues of the Eliashberg equation are
sufficiently large to explain the actual high Tc for realistic values of
Coulomb interaction and the most probable pairing state is spin-singlet s-wave
without any nodes just on the Fermi surfaces, although the superconducting
order parameter changes its sign between the small Fermi pockets. On the other
hand the 2-band model is quite insufficient to explain the actual high Tc.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the Intl. Symposium on
Fe-Oxypnictide Superconductors (Tokyo, 28-29th June 2008
Promotion of cooperation induced by nonlinear attractive effect in spatial Prisoner's Dilemma game
We introduce nonlinear attractive effects into a spatial Prisoner's Dilemma
game where the players located on a square lattice can either cooperate with
their nearest neighbors or defect. In every generation, each player updates its
strategy by firstly choosing one of the neighbors with a probability
proportional to denoting the attractiveness of the
neighbor, where is the payoff collected by it and
(0) is a free parameter characterizing the extent of the nonlinear
effect; and then adopting its strategy with a probability dependent on their
payoff difference. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we investigate the density
of cooperators in the stationary state for different values of
. It is shown that the introduction of such attractive effect
remarkably promotes the emergence and persistence of cooperation over a wide
range of the temptation to defect. In particular, for large values of ,
i.e., strong nonlinear attractive effects, the system exhibits two absorbing
states (all cooperators or all defectors) separated by an active state
(coexistence of cooperators and defectors) when varying the temptation to
defect. In the critical region where goes to zero, the extinction
behavior is power law-like , where the
exponent accords approximatively with the critical exponent
() of the two-dimensional directed percolation and depends
weakly on the value of .Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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