807 research outputs found
A Vertex Correction in the Gap Equation for the High Temperature Superconductors
We show that the Migdal theorem is obviously violated in the high Tc cuprates
and the vertex correction should be included, in particular, in the gap
equation, in order to be consistent with the anomalously strong inelastic
scattering in the ``hot spots'', which is observed from the various normal
state experiments. The vertex correction is obtained by utilizing the
generalized Ward identity, which is shown to hold in the important scattering
channel for the pairing interaction in the high Tc cuprates. As a result, we
find a strong enhancement of Tc from the vertex correction despite of the
strong pair breaking effect due to the inelastic scattering.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Detecting Vanishing Dimensions Via Primordial Gravitational Wave Astronomy
Lower-dimensionality at higher energies has manifold theoretical advantages
as recently pointed out. Moreover, it appears that experimental evidence may
already exists for it - a statistically significant planar alignment of events
with energies higher than TeV has been observed in some earlier cosmic ray
experiments. We propose a robust and independent test for this new paradigm.
Since (2+1)-dimensional spacetimes have no gravitational degrees of freedom,
gravity waves cannot be produced in that epoch. This places a universal maximum
frequency at which primordial waves can propagate, marked by the transition
between dimensions. We show that this cut-off frequency may be accessible to
future gravitational wave detectors such as LISA.Comment: Somewhat expanded version with discussions that could not fit into
the PRL version; references adde
Fermionic Zero Modes on Domain Walls
We study fermionic zero modes in the domain wall background. The fermions
have Dirac and left- and right-handed Majorana mass terms. The source of the
Dirac mass term is the coupling to a scalar field . The source of the
Majorana mass terms could also be the coupling to a scalar field or a
vacuum expectation value of some other field acquired in a phase transition
well above the phase transition of the field . We derive the fermionic
equations of motion and find the necessary and sufficient conditions for a zero
mode to exist. We also find the solutions numerically. In the absence of the
Majorana mass terms, the equations are solvable analytically. In the case of
massless fermions a zero energy solution exists and we show that although this
mode is not discretely normalizable it is Dirac delta function normalizable and
should be viewed as part of a continuum spectrum rather than as an isolated
zero mode.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, matches version published in PR
Statistics of charged solitons and formation of stripes
The 2-fold degeneracy of the ground state of a quasi-one-dimensional system
allows it to support topological excitations such as solitons. We study the
combined effects of Coulomb interactions and confinement due to interchain
coupling on the statistics of such defects. We concentrate on a 2D case which
may correspond to monolayers of polyacetylene or other charge density waves.
The theory is developped by a mapping to the 2D Ising model with long-range
4-spin interactions. The phase diagram exhibits deconfined phases for liquids
and Wigner crystals of kinks and confined ones for bikinks. Also we find
aggregated phases with either infinite domain walls of kinks or finite rods of
bikinks. Roughening effects due to both temperature and Coulomb repulsion are
observed. Applications may concern the melting of stripes in doped correlated
materials.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Using quasars as standard clocks for measuring cosmological redshift
We report hitherto unnoticed patterns in quasar light curves. We characterize
segments of quasars' light curves with the slopes of the straight lines fit
through them. These slopes appear to be directly related to the quasars'
redshifts. Alternatively, using only global shifts in time and flux, we are
able to find significant overlaps between the light curves of different pairs
of quasars by fitting the ratio of their redshifts. We are then able to
reliably determine the redshift of one quasar from another. This implies that
one can use quasars as standard clocks, as we explicitly demonstrate by
constructing two independent methods of finding the redshift of a quasar from
its light curve.Comment: References added, Published in Phys. Rev. Let
Holes in the walls: primordial black holes as a solution to the cosmological domain wall problem
We propose a scenario in which the cosmological domain wall and monopole
problems are solved without any fine tuning of the initial conditions or
parameters in the Lagrangian of an underlying filed theory. In this scenario
domain walls sweep out (unwind) the monopoles from the early universe, then the
fast primordial black holes perforate the domain walls, change their topology
and destroy them. We find further that the (old vacuum) energy density released
from the domain walls could alleviate but not solve the cosmological flatness
problem.Comment: References added; Published in Phys. Rev.
Effect of FET geometry on charge ordering of transition metal oxides
We examine the effect of an FET geometry on the charge ordering phase diagram
of transition metal oxides using numerical simulations of a semiclassical model
including long-range Coulomb fields, resulting in nanoscale pattern formation.
We find that the phase diagram is unchanged for insulating layers thicker than
approximately twice the magnetic correlation length. For very thin insulating
layers, the onset of a charge clump phase is shifted to lower values of the
strength of the magnetic dipolar interaction, and intermediate diagonal stripe
and geometric phases can be suppressed. Our results indicate that, for
sufficiently thick insulating layers, charge injection in an FET geometry can
be used to experimentally probe the intrinsic charge ordering phases in these
materials.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figure
BlackMax: A black-hole event generator with rotation, recoil, split branes and brane tension
We present a comprehensive black-hole event generator, BlackMax, which
simulates the experimental signatures of microscopic and Planckian black-hole
production and evolution at the LHC in the context of brane world models with
low-scale quantum gravity. The generator is based on phenomenologically
realistic models free of serious problems that plague low-scale gravity, thus
offering more realistic predictions for hadron-hadron colliders. The generator
includes all of the black-hole graybody factors known to date and incorporates
the effects of black-hole rotation, splitting between the fermions, non-zero
brane tension and black-hole recoil due to Hawking radiation (although not all
simultaneously).
The generator can be interfaced with Herwig and Pythia.Comment: 32 pages, 61 figures, webpage
http://www-pnp.physics.ox.ac.uk/~issever/BlackMax/blackmax.htm
Non-Universal Power Law of the "Hall Scattering Rate" in a Single-Layer Cuprate Bi_{2}Sr_{2-x}La_{x}CuO_{6}
In-plane resistivity \rho_{ab}, Hall coefficient, and magnetoresistance (MR)
are measured in a series of high-quality Bi_{2}Sr_{2-x}La_{x}CuO_{6} crystals
with various carrier concentrations, from underdope to overdope. Our crystals
show the highest T_c (33 K) and the smallest residual resistivity ever reported
for Bi-2201 at optimum doping. It is found that the temperature dependence of
the Hall angle obeys a power law T^n with n systematically decreasing with
increasing doping, which questions the universality of the Fermi-liquid-like
T^2 dependence of the "Hall scattering rate". In particular, the Hall angle of
the optimally-doped sample changes as T^{1.7}, not as T^2, while \rho_{ab}
shows a good T-linear behavior. The systematics of the MR indicates an
increasing role of spin scattering in underdoped samples.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Crossing the phantom divide with Ricci-like holographic dark energy
We study a holographic model for the dark energy considered recently in the
literature which postulates an energy density , where is the
Ricci scalar curvature. We obtain a cosmological scenario that comes from
considering two non-interacting fluids along a reasonable Ansatz for the cosmic
coincidence parameter. We adjust the involved parameters in the model according
to the observational data and we show that the equation of state for the dark
energy experience a cross through the -1 barrier. In addition, we find a
disagreement in these parameters with respect to an approach from a scalar
field theory.Comment: Match with accepted version by EPJ
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