301 research outputs found
A stable Algebraic Spin Liquid in a Hubbard model
We show the existence of a stable Algebraic Spin Liquid (ASL) phase in a
Hubbard model defined on a honeycomb lattice with spin-dependent hopping that
breaks time-reversal symmetry. The effective spin model is the Kitaev model for
large on-site repulsion. The gaplessness of the emergent Majorana fermions is
protected by the time reversal (TR) invariance of this model. We prove that the
effective spin model is TR invariant in the entire Mott phase thus ensuring the
stability of the ASL. The model can be physically realized in cold atom systems
and we propose experimental signals of the ASL.Comment: Published in PR
Local electronic nematicity in the one-band Hubbard model
Nematicity is a well known property of liquid crystals and has been recently
discussed in the context of strongly interacting electrons. An electronic
nematic phase has been seen by many experiments in certain strongly correlated
materials, in particular, in the pseudogap phase generic to many hole-doped
cuprate superconductors. Recent measurements in high superconductors has
shown even if the lattice is perfectly rotationally symmetric, the ground state
can still have strongly nematic local properties. Our study of the
two-dimensional Hubbard model provides strong support of the recent
experimental results on local rotational symmetry breaking. The
variational cluster approach is used here to show the possibility of an
electronic nematic state and the proximity of the underlying symmetry-breaking
ground state within the Hubbard model. We identify this nematic phase in the
overdoped region and show that the local nematicity decreases with increasing
electron filling. Our results also indicate that strong Coulomb interaction may
drive the nematic phase into a phase similar to the stripe structure. The
calculated spin (magnetic) correlation function in momentum space shows the
effects resulting from real-space nematicity
Enhanced Two-Channel Kondo Physics in a Quantum Box Device
We propose a design for a one-dimensional quantum box device where the charge
fluctuations are described by an anisotropic two-channel Kondo model. The
device consists of a quantum box in the Coulomb blockade regime, weakly coupled
to a quantum wire by a single-mode point contact. The electron correlations in
the wire produce strong back scattering at the contact, significantly
increasing the Kondo temperature as compared to the case of non-interacting
electrons. By employing boundary conformal field theory techniques we show that
the differential capacitance of the box exhibits manifest two-channel Kondo
scaling with temperature and gate voltage, uncontaminated by the
one-dimensional electron correlations. We discuss the prospect to
experimentally access the Kondo regime with this type of device.Comment: EPL style, 5 pages, 1 figure, final published versio
Étude longitudinale à propos de l’espace occupé par les pseudosciences dans les librairies du Québec
Dans cet article, nous présentons les résultats d’une étude
longitudinale concernant la proportion d’espace consacrée
d’une part aux ouvrages de pseudosciences (paranormal,
ésotérisme, nouvel âge, arts divinatoires, etc.) et de
sciences pour adultes et, d’autre part, aux ouvrages de
spiritualité et de sciences pour enfants dans les librairies
du Québec. Deux mesures ont été prises, l’une en 2001
dans 55 librairies et l’autre, en 2011 dans 72 librairies.
Des analyses statistiques ont été réalisées à partir des
mesures prises uniquement dans les librairies visitées
aux deux temps de mesure. Les résultats des analyses
corrélationnelles montrent que les librairies qui consacrent
davantage d’espaces aux ouvrages de pseudosciences
destinés aux adultes (n = 40) et aux ouvrages de spiritualité
destinés aux enfants (n = 38) sont les mêmes en 2001 et
en 2011. Par ailleurs, une ANOVA à mesures répétées
montre que la proportion d’espace dévolue aux ouvrages
de pseudosciences destinés aux adultes a diminué au
deuxième temps de mesure, ce qui n’est pas le cas des
livres de spiritualité offerts aux enfants. Après un bref retour
sur la méthode utilisée et les résultats, nous invoquons
quatre raisons susceptibles d’expliquer la popularité des
pseudosciences ainsi que quelques conséquences éthiques
et sociales de leur vogue. En conclusion, nous proposons
deux solutions pour valoriser la démarche scientifique aux
yeux des adolescents et des enfants.In this article, we present the results of a longitudinal study on the proportion of space devoted,
on the one hand, to books of pseudosciences (paranormal, the occult, new age, methods of
divination, etc.) and of sciences for adults; and on the other hand, on the proportion of space
devoted to books of spirituality and sciences for children in the bookstores of Quebec. Two
measures were taken, one in 2001 in 55 bookstores, and the other one in 2011 in 72 bookstores.
Statistical analyses were conducted only on the measures taken in the bookstores that were
visited at the two measurement times. Results from correlational analyses show that those
bookstores that devote more space to books of pseudosciences for adults (n = 40) and to
books of spirituality for children (n = 38) are the same in 2001 and 2011. Moreover, a repeated
measures ANOVA indicate that the proportion of space devoted to books of pseudosciences
for adults had decreased at the second measurement time, which is not the case for books
of spirituality for children. After briefly revisiting the methodology and results, we put forward
four reasons that may explain the popularity of pseudosciences, as well as a few ethical and
social consequences from their fashion. In our concluding remarks, we suggest two solutions
to promote scientific reasoning among adolescents and children
Characteristics of oxygen isotope substitutions in the quasiparticle spectrum of BiSrCaCuO
There is an ongoing debate about the nature of the bosonic excitations
responsible for the quasiparticle self energy in high temperature
superconductors -- are they phonons or spin fluctuations? We present a careful
analysis of the bosonic excitations as revealed by the `kink' feature at 70 meV
in angle resolved photoemission data using Eliashberg theory for a d-wave
superconductor. Starting from the assumption that nodal quasiparticles are not
coupled to the magnetic resonance, the sharp structure at meV
can be assigned to phonons. We find that not only can we account for the shifts
of the kink energy seen on oxygen isotope substitution but also get a
quantitative estimate of the fraction of the area under the electron-boson
spectral density which is due to phonons. We conclude that for optimally doped
BiSrCaCuO phonons contribute % and
non-phononic excitations %.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Semiclassical description of spin ladders
The Heisenberg spin ladder is studied in the semiclassical limit, via a
mapping to the nonlinear model. Different treatments are needed if the
inter-chain coupling is small, intermediate or large. For intermediate
coupling a single nonlinear model is used for the ladder. Its predicts
a spin gap for all nonzero values of if the sum of the spins
of the two chains is an integer, and no gap otherwise. For small , a better
treatment proceeds by coupling two nonlinear sigma models, one for each chain.
For integer , the saddle-point approximation predicts a sharp drop
in the gap as increases from zero. A Monte-Carlo simulation of a spin 1
ladder is presented which supports the analytical results.Comment: 8 pages, RevTeX 3.0, 4 PostScript figure
First order Mott transition at zero temperature in two dimensions: Variational plaquette study
The nature of the metal-insulator Mott transition at zero temperature has
been discussed for a number of years. Whether it occurs through a quantum
critical point or through a first order transition is expected to profoundly
influence the nature of the finite temperature phase diagram. In this paper, we
study the zero temperature Mott transition in the two-dimensional Hubbard model
on the square lattice with the variational cluster approximation. This takes
into account the influence of antiferromagnetic short-range correlations. By
contrast to single-site dynamical mean-field theory, the transition turns out
to be first order even at zero temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, version 2 with additional results for 8 bath
site
Synthetic use of the primary kinetic isotope effect in hydrogen atom transfer: generation of α-aminoalkyl radicals.
addresses: School of Biosciences, University of Exeter, Geoffrey Pope Building, Stocker Road, Exeter, UKEX4 4QD. [email protected]: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright © 2010 Royal Society of ChemistryThe extent to which deuterium can act as a protecting group to prevent unwanted 1,5-hydrogen atom transfer to aryl and vinyl radical intermediates was examined in the context of the generation of α-aminoalkyl radicals in a pyrrolidine ring. Intra- and intermolecular radical trapping following hydrogen atom transfer provides an illustration of the use of the primary kinetic isotope effect in directing the outcome of synthetic C-C bond-forming processes
Spectroscopic signatures of spin-charge separation in the quasi-one-dimensional organic conductor TTF-TCNQ
The electronic structure of the quasi-one-dimensional organic conductor
TTF-TCNQ is studied by angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES). The
experimental spectra reveal significant discrepancies to band theory. We
demonstrate that the measured dispersions can be consistently mapped onto the
one-dimensional Hubbard model at finite doping. This interpretation is further
supported by a remarkable transfer of spectral weight as function of
temperature. The ARPES data thus show spectroscopic signatures of spin-charge
separation on an energy scale of the conduction band width.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; to appear in PR
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