1,591 research outputs found
Breathing Modes and Hidden Symmetry of Trapped Atoms in 2D
Atoms confined in a harmonic potential show universal oscillations in 2D. We
point out the connection of these ''breathing'' modes to the presence of a
hidden symmetry. The underlying symmetry SO(2,1), i.e. the two dimensional
Lorentz group, allows pulsating solutions to be constructed for the interacting
quantum system and for the corresponding nonlinear Gross-Pitaevskii equation.
We point out how this symmetry can be used as a probe for recently proposed
experiments of trapped atoms in 2D.Comment: 4 pages, small changes in title and text, references adde
Mott transition of fermionic atoms in a three-dimensional optical trap
We study theoretically the Mott metal-insulator transition for a system of
fermionic atoms confined in a three-dimensional optical lattice and a harmonic
trap. We describe an inhomogeneous system of several thousand sites using an
adaptation of dynamical mean field theory solved efficiently with the numerical
renormalization group method. Above a critical value of the on-site
interaction, a Mott-insulating phase appears in the system. We investigate
signatures of the Mott phase in the density profile and in time-of-flight
experiments.Comment: 4 pages and 5 figure
Metal-Insulator Transition of the LaAlO3-SrTiO3 Interface Electron System
We report on a metal-insulator transition in the LaAlO3-SrTiO3 interface
electron system, of which the carrier density is tuned by an electric gate
field. Below a critical carrier density n_c ranging from 0.5-1.5 * 10^13/cm^2,
LaAlO3-SrTiO3 interfaces, forming drain-source channels in field-effect devices
are non-ohmic. The differential resistance at zero channel bias diverges within
a 2% variation of the carrier density. Above n_c, the conductivity of the ohmic
channels has a metal-like temperature dependence, while below n_c conductivity
sets in only above a threshold electric field. For a given thickness of the
LaAlO3 layer, the conductivity follows a sigma_0 ~(n - n_c)/n_c characteristic.
The metal-insulator transition is found to be distinct from that of the
semiconductor 2D systems.Comment: 4 figure
Majorana Fermions in Strongly Interacting Helical Liquids
Majorana fermions were proposed to occur at edges and interfaces of gapped
one-dimensional systems where phases with different topological character meet
due to an interplay of spin-orbit coupling, proximity-induced superconductivity
and external magnetic fields. Here we investigate the effect of strong particle
interactions, and show that the helical liquid offers a mechanism that protects
the very existence of Majorana edge states: whereas moderate interactions close
the proximity gap which supports the edge states, in helical liquids the gap
re-opens due to two-particle processes. However, gapless fermionic excitations
occur at spatial proximity to the Majorana states at interfaces and may
jeopardize their long term Majorana coherence.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Weak spin-orbit interactions induce exponentially flat mini-bands in magnetic metals without inversion symmetry
In metallic magnets like MnSi the interplay of two very weak spin-orbit
coupling effects can strongly modify the Fermi surface. In the absence of
inversion symmetry even a very small Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interaction of
strength delta<<1 distorts a ferromagnetic state into a chiral helix with a
long pitch of order 1/delta. We show that additional small spin-orbit coupling
terms of order delta in the band structure lead to the formation of
exponentially flat minibands with a bandwidth of order exp(-1/sqrt(delta))
parallel to the direction of the helix. These flat minibands cover a rather
broad belt of width sqrt(delta) on the Fermi surface where electron motion
parallel to the helix practically stops. We argue that these peculiar
band-structure effects lead to pronounced features in the anomalous skin
effect.Comment: 7 pages, minor corrections, references adde
Nonlinear conductance of long quantum wires at a conductance plateau transition: Where does the voltage drop?
We calculate the linear and nonlinear conductance of spinless fermions in
clean, long quantum wires where short-ranged interactions lead locally to
equilibration. Close to the quantum phase transition where the conductance
jumps from zero to one conductance quantum, the conductance obtains an
universal form governed by the ratios of temperature, bias voltage and gate
voltage. Asymptotic analytic results are compared to solutions of a Boltzmann
equation which includes the effects of three-particle scattering. Surprisingly,
we find that for long wires the voltage predominantly drops close to one end of
the quantum wire due to a thermoelectric effect.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures plus supplementary material (2 pages, 1 figure);
minor changes, references correcte
Spin conductivity in almost integrable spin chains
The spin conductivity in the integrable spin-1/2 XXZ-chain is known to be
infinite at finite temperatures T for anisotropies -1 < Delta < 1.
Perturbations which break integrability, e.g. a next-nearest neighbor coupling
J', render the conductivity finite. We construct numerically a non-local
conserved operator J_parallel which is responsible for the finite spin Drude
weight of the integrable model and calculate its decay rate for small J'. This
allows us to obtain a lower bound for the spin conductivity sigma_s >= c(T) /
J'^2, where c(T) is finite for J' to 0. We discuss the implication of our
result for the general question how non-local conservation laws affect
transport properties.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
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
Kondo proximity effect: How does a metal penetrate into a Mott insulator?
We consider a heterostructure of a metal and a paramagnetic Mott insulator
using an adaptation of dynamical mean field theory to describe inhomogeneous
systems. The metal can penetrate into the insulator via the Kondo effect. We
investigate the scaling properties of the metal-insulator interface close to
the critical point of the Mott insulator. At criticality, the quasiparticle
weight decays as 1/x^2 with distance x from the metal within our mean field
theory. Our numerical results (using the numerical renormalization group as an
impurity solver) show that the prefactor of this power law is extremely small.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Network dynamics in the healthy and epileptic developing brain
Electroencephalography (EEG) allows recording of cortical activity at high temporal resolution. EEG recordings can be summarised along different dimensions using network-level quantitative measures, e.g. channel-to-channel correlation, or band power distributions across channels. These reveal network patterns that unfold over a range of different time scales and can be tracked dynamically.
Here we describe the dynamics of network-state transitions in EEG recordings of spontaneous brain activity in normally developing infants and infants with severe early infantile epileptic encephalopathies (n=8, age: 1-8 months). We describe differences in measures of EEG dynamics derived from band power, and correlation-based summaries of network-wide brain activity.
We further show that EEGs from different patient groups and controls may be distinguishable based on a small set of the novel quantitative measures introduced here, which describe dynamic network state switching. Quantitative measures related to the sharpness of switching from one correlation pattern to another show the largest differences between groups.
These findings reveal that the early epileptic encephalopathies are associated with characteristic dynamic features at the network level. Quantitative network-based analyses like the one presented here may in future inform the clinical use of quantitative EEG for diagnosis
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