996 research outputs found

    Sequence of phase transitions induced in an array of Josephson junctions by their crossover to pi-state

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    We show that the transition of Josephson junctions between the conventional and pi states caused by the decrease in temperature induces in a regular two-dimensional array of such junctions not just a single phase transition between two phases with different ordering but a sequence of two, three or four phase transitions. The corresponding phase diagrams are constructed for the cases of bipartite (square or honeycomb) and triangular lattices.Comment: 5 pages, v2: as published in EP

    Phase diagram of the fully frustrated transverse-field Ising model on the honeycomb lattice

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    Motivated by the current interest in the quantum dimer model on the triangular lattice, we investigate the phase diagram of the closely related fully-frustrated transverse field Ising model on the honeycomb lattice using classical and semi-classical approximations. We show that, in addition to the fully polarized phase at large field, the classical model possesses a multitude of phases that break the translational symmetry which in the dimer language, correspond to a plaquette phase and a columnar phase separated by an infinite cascade of mixed phases. The modification of the phase diagram by quantum fluctuations has been investigated in the context of linear spin-wave theory. The extrapolation of the semiclassical energies suggests that the plaquette phase extends down to zero field for spin 1/2, in agreement with the 12×12\sqrt{12}\times\sqrt{12} phase of the quantum dimer model on the triangular lattice with only kinetic energy.Comment: 15 Pages, 11 Figures, Accepted for PR

    Coulomb Blockade and Insulator-to-Metal Quantum Phase Transition

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    We analyze an interplay between Coulomb blockade and quantum fluctuations in a coherent conductor (with dimensionless conductance g1g \gtrsim 1) attached to an Ohmic shunt. We demonstrate that at T=0 the system can be either an insulator or a metal depending on whether its total resistance is larger or smaller than h/e225.8h/e^2\approx 25.8 kΩ\Omega. In a metallic phase the Coulomb gap is fully suppressed by quantum fluctuations. We briefly discuss possible relation of this effect to recent experiments indicating the presence of a metal-insulator phase transition in 2d disordered systems.Comment: 4 revtex pages, no figure

    Phase slip phenomena in superconductors: from ordered to chaotic dynamics

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    We consider flux penetration to a 2D superconducting cylinder. We show that in the low field limit the kinetics is deterministic. In the strong field limit the dynamics becomes stochastic. Surprisingly the inhomogeneity in the cylinder reduces the level of stochasticity because of the predominance of Kelvin-Helmholtz vortices.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (main text) and 1 page, 1 figure (supplementary material

    Dissipation, topology, and quantum phase transition in a one-dimensional Joesphson junction array

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    We study the phase diagram and quantum critical properties of a resistively shunted Josephson junction array in one dimension from a strong coupling analysis. After mapping the dissipative quantum phase model to an effective sine-Gordon model we study the renormalization group flow and the phase diagram. We try to bridge the phase diagrams obtained from the weak and the strong coupling renormalization group calculations to extract a more comprehensive picture of the complete phase diagram. The relevance of our theory to experiments in nanowires is discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, A few typos are correcte

    Coulomb Blockade with Dispersive Interfaces

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    What quantity controls the Coulomb blockade oscillations if the dot--lead conductance is essentially frequency--dependent ? We argue that it is the ac dissipative conductance at the frequency given by the effective charging energy. The latter may be very different from the bare charging energy due to the interface--induced capacitance (or inductance). These observations are supported by a number of examples, considered from the weak and strong coupling (perturbation theory vs. instanton calculus) perspectives.Comment: 4 page

    Nonperturbative interaction effects in the thermodynamics of disordered wires

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    We study nonperturbative interaction corrections to the thermodynamic quantities of multichannel disordered wires in the presence of the Coulomb interactions. Within the replica nonlinear σ\sigma-model (NLσ\sigmaM) formalism, they arise from nonperturbative soliton saddle points of the NLσ\sigmaM action. The problem is reduced to evaluating the partition function of a replicated classical one dimensional Coulomb gas. The state of the latter depends on two parameters: the number of transverse channels in the wire, N_{ch}, and the dimensionless conductance, G(L_T), of a wire segment of length equal to the thermal diffusion length, L_T. At relatively high temperatures, G(LT)lnNchG(L_T) \gtrsim \ln N_{ch} , the gas is dimerized, i.e. consists of bound neutral pairs. At lower temperatures, lnNchG(LT)1\ln N_{ch} \gtrsim G(L_T) \gtrsim 1, the pairs overlap and form a Coulomb plasma. The crossover between the two regimes occurs at a parametrically large conductance G(LT)lnNchG(L_T) \sim \ln N_{ch}, and may be studied independently from the perturbative effects. Specializing to the high temperature regime, we obtain the leading nonperturbative correction to the wire heat capacity. Its ratio to the heat capacity for noninteracting electrons, C_0, is δC/C0NchG2(LT)e2G(LT)\delta C/C_0\sim N_{ch}G^2(L_T)e^{-2G(L_T)}.Comment: 18 page

    Magnetoinductance of Josephson junction array with frozen vortex diffusion

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    The dependence of sheet impedance of a Josephson junction array on the applied magnetic field is investigated in the regime when vortex diffusion between array plaquettes is effectively frozen due to low enough temperature. The field dependent contribution to sheet inductance is found to be proportional to f*ln(1/f), where f<<1 is the magnitude of the field expressed in terms of flux quanta per plaquette.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
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