1,308 research outputs found
Field-tuned quantum critical point of antiferromagnetic metals
A magnetic field applied to a three-dimensional antiferromagnetic metal can
destroy the long-range order and thereby induce a quantum critical point. Such
field-induced quantum critical behavior is the focus of many recent
experiments. We investigate theoretically the quantum critical behavior of
clean antiferromagnetic metals subject to a static, spatially uniform external
magnetic field. The external field does not only suppress (or induce in some
systems) antiferromagnetism but also influences the dynamics of the order
parameter by inducing spin precession. This leads to an exactly marginal
correction to spin-fluctuation theory. We investigate how the interplay of
precession and damping determines the specific heat, magnetization,
magnetocaloric effect, susceptibility and scattering rates. We point out that
the precession can change the sign of the leading \sqrt{T} correction to the
specific heat coefficient c(T)/T and can induce a characteristic maximum in
c(T)/T for certain parameters. We argue that the susceptibility \chi =\partial
M/\partial B is the thermodynamic quantity which shows the most significant
change upon approaching the quantum critical point and which gives experimental
access to the (dangerously irrelevant) spin-spin interactions.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Advanced information processing system for advanced launch system: Avionics architecture synthesis
The Advanced Information Processing System (AIPS) is a fault-tolerant distributed computer system architecture that was developed to meet the real time computational needs of advanced aerospace vehicles. One such vehicle is the Advanced Launch System (ALS) being developed jointly by NASA and the Department of Defense to launch heavy payloads into low earth orbit at one tenth the cost (per pound of payload) of the current launch vehicles. An avionics architecture that utilizes the AIPS hardware and software building blocks was synthesized for ALS. The AIPS for ALS architecture synthesis process starting with the ALS mission requirements and ending with an analysis of the candidate ALS avionics architecture is described
Thermal Conductivity of Spin-1/2 Chains
We study the low-temperature transport properties of clean one-dimensional
spin-1/2 chains coupled to phonons. Due to the presence of approximate
conservation laws, the heat current decays very slowly giving rise to an
exponentially large heat conductivity, . As a result of an
interplay of Umklapp scattering and spinon-phonon coupling, the characteristic
energy scale turns out to be of order , where is
the Debye energy, rather than the magnetic exchange interaction -- in
agreement with recent measurements in SrCuO compounds. A large magnetic field
strongly affects the heat transport by two distinct mechanisms. First, it
induces a LINEAR spinon--phonon coupling, which alters the nature of the fixed point: the elementary excitations of the system are COMPOSITE
SPINON-PHONON objects. Second, the change of the magnetization and the
corresponding change of the wave vector of the spinons strongly affects the way
in which various Umklapp processes can relax the heat current, leading to a
characteristic fractal--like spiky behavior of when plotted as a
function of magnetization at fixed T.Comment: 16 pages, RevTex4, 2 figures included; revised refs. and some useful
comments on experimental relevance. On July 12 2005, added an appendix
correcting an error in the form of the phonon propagator. The main result is
unchange
Anomalous magnetotransport in (YGd)Co alloys: interplay of disorder and itinerant metamagnetism
New mechanism of magnetoresistivity in itinerant metamagnets with a
structural disorder is introduced basing on analysis of experimental results on
magnetoresistivity, susceptibility, and magnetization of structurally
disordered alloys (YGd)Co. In this series, YCo is an
enhanced Pauli paramagnet, whereas GdCo is a ferrimagnet (T=400
K) with Gd sublattice coupled antiferromagnetically to the itinerant Co-3d
electrons. The alloys are paramagnetic for . Large positive
magnetoresistivity has been observed in the alloys with magnetic ground state
at temperatures TT. We show that this unusual feature is linked to
a combination of structural disorder and metamagnetic instability of itinerant
Co-3d electrons. This new mechanism of the magnetoresistivity is common for a
broad class of materials featuring a static magnetic disorder and itinerant
metamagnetism.Comment: 7 pages 7 figure
Breakdown of the Kondo Effect in Critical Antiferromagnets
The breakdown of the Kondo effect may be the origin of the anomalous
properties of the heavy-fermion compounds at low temperatures. We study the
dynamics of one impurity embedded in an antiferromagnetic host at the quantum
critical point and show that the impurity is not screened and develops a power
law correlation function. This suggests that the breakdown of the Kondo effect
can simply be a consequence of the system's proximity to the quantum critical
point.Comment: To appear in Physical Review B (Brief Reports
Spectral function of the Kondo model in high magnetic fields
Using a recently developed perturbative renormalization group (RG) scheme, we
calculate analytically the spectral function of a Kondo impurity for either
large frequencies w or large magnetic field B and arbitrary frequencies. For
large w >> max[B,T_K] the spectral function decays as 1/ln^2[ w/T_K ] with
prefactors which depend on the magnetization. The spin-resolved spectral
function displays a pronounced peak at w=B with a characteristic asymmetry. In
a detailed comparison with results from numerical renormalization group (NRG)
and bare perturbation theory in next-to-leading logarithmic order, we show that
our perturbative RG scheme is controlled by the small parameter 1/ln[
max(w,B)/T_K]. Furthermore, we assess the ability of the NRG to resolve
structures at finite frequencies.Comment: 8 pages, version published in PRB, minor change
Fermionic superoperators for zero-temperature non-linear transport: real-time perturbation theory and renormalization group for Anderson quantum dots
We study the transport through a strongly interacting Anderson quantum dot at
zero-temperature using the real-time renormalization group (RT-RG) in the
framework of a kinetic equation for the reduced density operator. We further
develop the general finite temperature real-time transport formalism by
introducing field superoperators that obey fermionic statistics. This direct
second quantization in Liouville-Fock space strongly simplifies the
construction of operators and superoperators which transform irreducibly under
the Anderson-model symmetry transformations. The fermionic field superoperators
naturally arise from the univalence (fermion-parity) superselection rule for
the total system. Expressed in these field superoperators, the causal structure
of the perturbation theory for the effective time-evolution
superoperator-kernel becomes explicit. The causal structure also implies the
existence of a fermion-parity protected eigenvector of the exact Liouvillian,
explaining a recently reported result on adiabatic driving [Phys. Rev. B 85,
075301 (2012)] and generalizing it to arbitrary order in the tunnel coupling.
Furthermore, in the WBL the causal representation exponentially reduces the
number of diagrams for the time-evolution kernel. We perform a complete 2-loop
RG analysis at finite voltage and magnetic field, while systematically
accounting for the dependence on both the quantum dot and reservoir
frequencies. Using the second quantization in Liouville-space and symmetry
restrictions we obtain analytical RT-RG equations with an efficient numerical
solution and we extensively study the model parameter space, excluding the
Kondo regime. The incorporated renormalization effects result in an enhancement
of the inelastic cotunneling peak. Moreover, we find a tunnel-induced
non-linearity of the stability diagrams at finite voltage, both in the SET and
ICT regime.Comment: With respect to the version of 13.07.2012: Corrected typos. Fig.1 was
corrected. Right scales on Fig.6b were set. English grammatic improved. One
reference adde
Decision and Discovery in Defining âDiseaseâ
This version (May 17, 2005) was published in its final form as:
Schwartz PH. Decision and discovery in defining 'disease'. In: Kincaid H, McKitrick J, editors. Establishing medical reality: essays in the metaphysics and epistemology of biomedical science. Dordrecht: Springer; 2007. p. 47-63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-5216-2_5The debate over how to analyze the concept of disease has often centered on the question of whether to include a reference to values, in particular the âdisvalueâof diseases, or whether to avoid such notions. âNormativists,âsuch as King ([1954], 1981) and Culver and Gert (1982) emphasize the undesirability of diseases, while âNaturalists,â most prominently Christopher Boorse (1977, 1987, 1997), instead require just the presence of biological dysfunction. The debate between normativism and naturalism often deteriorates into stalemate, with each side able to point out significant problems with the other. It starts to look as if neither approach can work. In this paper, I argue that the standoff stems from deeply questionable assumptions that have been used to formulate the opposing positions and guide the debate. In the end, I propose an alternative set of guidelines that offer a more constructive way to devise and compare theories
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