102 research outputs found
Clustering of fermionic truncated expectation values via functional integration
I give a simple proof that the correlation functions of many-fermion systems
have a convergent functional Grassmann integral representation, and use this
representation to show that the cumulants of fermionic quantum statistical
mechanics satisfy l^1-clustering estimates
Non-Equilibrium Transport through a Kondo-Dot in a Magnetic Field: Perturbation Theory and Poor Man's Scaling
We consider electron transport through a quantum dot described by the Kondo
model in the regime of large transport voltage V in the presence of a magnetic
field B with max(V,B) >> T_K. The electric current I and the local
magnetization M are found to be universal functions of V/T_K and B/T_K, where
T_K is the equilibrium Kondo temperature. We present a generalization of the
perturbative renormalization group to frequency dependent coupling functions,
as necessitated by the structure of bare perturbation theory. We calculate I
and M within a poor man's scaling approach and find excellent agreement with
experiment.Comment: version accepted in PRL, notations changed, parts rewritten, figures
modified, references and some corrections adde
Strongly coupled compact lattice QED with staggered fermions
We explore the compact U(1) lattice gauge theory with staggered fermions and
gauge field action -\sum_P [\beta \cos(\Theta_P) + \gamma \cos(2\Theta_P)],
both for dynamical fermions and in the quenched approximation. (\Theta_P
denotes the plaquette angle.) In simulations with dynamical fermions at various
\gamma \le -0.2 on 6^4 lattices we find the energy gap at the phase transition
of a size comparable to the pure gauge theory for \gamma \le 0 on the same
lattice, diminishing with decreasing \gamma. This suggests a second order
transition in the thermodynamic limit of the theory with fermions for \gamma
below some finite negative value. Studying the theory on large lattices at
\gamma = -0.2 in the quenched approximation by means of the equation of state
we find non-Gaussian values of the critical exponents associated with the
chiral condensate, \beta \simeq 0.32 and \delta \simeq 1.8, and determine the
scaling function. Furthermore, we evaluate the meson spectrum and study the
PCAC relation.Comment: 21 page
Functional renormalization group for Luttinger liquids with impurities
We improve the recently developed functional renormalization group (fRG) for
impurities and boundaries in Luttinger liquids by including renormalization of
the two-particle interaction, in addition to renormalization of the impurity
potential. Explicit flow-equations are derived for spinless lattice fermions
with nearest neighbor interaction at zero temperature, and a fast algorithm for
solving these equations for very large systems is presented. We compute
spectral properties of single-particle excitations, and the oscillations in the
density profile induced by impurities or boundaries for chains with up to
1000000 lattice sites. The expected asymptotic power-laws at low energy or long
distance are fully captured by the fRG. Results on the relevant energy scales
and crossover phenomena at intermediate scales are also obtained. A comparison
with numerical density matrix renormalization results for systems with up to
1000 sites shows that the fRG with the inclusion of vertex renormalization is
remarkably accurate even for intermediate interaction strengths.Comment: 35 pages, 16 figures, revised version as publishe
A Rigorous Proof of Fermi Liquid Behavior for Jellium Two-Dimensional Interacting Fermions
Using the method of continuous constructive renormalization group around the
Fermi surface, it is proved that a jellium two-dimensional interacting system
of Fermions at low temperature remains analytic in the coupling constant
for where is some numerical constant
and is the temperature. Furthermore in that range of parameters, the first
and second derivatives of the self-energy remain bounded, a behavior which is
that of Fermi liquids and in particular excludes Luttinger liquid behavior. Our
results prove also that in dimension two any transition temperature must be
non-perturbative in the coupling constant, a result expected on physical
grounds. The proof exploits the specific momentum conservation rules in two
dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
Teledermatological monitoring of leg ulcers in cooperation with home care nurses
Objectives: To examine the feasibility and acceptance of teledermatology for wound management for patients with leg ulcers by home care nurses and evaluate the reduction of costs and the acceptance of teledermatology by patients and home care nurses
Fulminant systemic capillary leak syndrome due to C1 inhibitor deficiency complicating acute dermatomyositis: a case report
INTRODUCTION: Dermatomyositis is a chronic inflammatory disorder characterized by muscular and dermatologic symptoms with variable internal organ involvement. This is the first report on a patient with acute dermatomyositis and fulminant systemic capillary leak syndrome. CASE PRESENTATION: A 69-year-old Caucasian woman with chronic dermatomyositis presented with clinical signs of severe hypovolemic shock and pronounced hemoconcentration (hematocrit, 69%). Her colloid osmotic pressure was 4.6mmHg. Following a bolus dose of prednisolone (500mg), fluid resuscitation was initiated. During volume loading, anasarca and acute respiratory distress rapidly developed. Echocardiography revealed an underfilled, hypokinetic, diastolic dysfunctional left ventricle with pericardial effusion but no signs of tamponade. Despite continued fluid resuscitation and high-dosed catecholamine therapy, the patient died from refractory shock 12 hours after intensive care unit admission. A laboratory analysis of her complement system suggested the presence of C1 inhibitor deficiency as the cause for systemic capillary leakage. The post-mortem examination revealed bilateral pleural, pericardial and peritoneal effusions as well as left ventricular hypertrophy with patchy myocardial fibrosis. Different patterns of endomysial/perimysial lymphocytic infiltrations adjacent to degenerated cardiomyocytes in her myocardium and necrotic muscle fibers in her right psoas major muscle were found in the histological examination. CONCLUSIONS: This case report indicates that acute exacerbation of chronic dermatomyositis can result in a fulminant systemic capillary leak syndrome with intense hemoconcentration, hypovolemic shock and acute heart failure. In the presented patient, the cause for diffuse capillary leakage was most probably acquired angioedema, a condition that has been associated with both lymphoproliferative and autoimmunologic disorders
Renormalization group analysis of the 2D Hubbard model
Salmhofer [Commun. Math. Phys. 194, 249 (1998)] has recently developed a new
renormalization group method for interacting Fermi systems, where the complete
flow from the bare action of a microscopic model to the effective low-energy
action, as a function of a continuously decreasing infrared cutoff, is given by
a differential flow equation which is local in the flow parameter. We apply
this approach to the repulsive two-dimensional Hubbard model with nearest and
next-nearest neighbor hopping amplitudes. The flow equation for the effective
interaction is evaluated numerically on 1-loop level. The effective
interactions diverge at a finite energy scale which is exponentially small for
small bare interactions. To analyze the nature of the instabilities signalled
by the diverging interactions we extend Salmhofers renormalization group for
the calculation of susceptibilities. We compute the singlet superconducting
susceptibilities for various pairing symmetries and also charge and spin
density susceptibilities. Depending on the choice of the model parameters
(hopping amplitudes, interaction strength and band-filling) we find
commensurate and incommensurate antiferromagnetic instabilities or d-wave
superconductivity as leading instability. We present the resulting phase
diagram in the vicinity of half-filling and also results for the density
dependence of the critical energy scale.Comment: 16 pages, RevTeX, 16 eps figure
The temperature-flow renormalization group and the competition between superconductivity and ferromagnetism
We derive a differential equation for the one-particle-irreducible vertex
functions of interacting fermions as a function of the temperature. Formally,
these equations correspond to a Wilsonian renormalization group scheme which
uses the temperature as an explicit scale parameter. Our novel method allows us
to analyze the competition between superconducting and various magnetic Fermi
surface instabilities in the one-loop approximation. In particular this
includes ferromagnetic fluctuations, which are difficult to treat on an equal
footing in conventional Wilsonian momentum space techniques. Applying the
scheme to the two-dimensional t-t' Hubbard model we investigate the RG flow of
the interactions at the van Hove filling with varying next-nearest neighbor
hopping t'. Starting at t'=0 we describe the evolution of the flow to strong
coupling from an antiferromagnetic nesting regime over a d-wave regime at
moderate t' to a ferromagnetic region at larger absolute values of t'. Upon
increasing the particle density in the latter regime the ferromagnetic
tendencies are cut off and the leading instability occurs in the triplet
superconducting pairing channel.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
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