73 research outputs found

    Linear Response Calculations of Spin Fluctuations

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    A variational formulation of the time--dependent linear response based on the Sternheimer method is developed in order to make practical ab initio calculations of dynamical spin susceptibilities of solids. Using gradient density functional and a muffin-tin-orbital representation, the efficiency of the approach is demonstrated by applications to selected magnetic and strongly paramagnetic metals. The results are found to be consistent with experiment and are compared with previous theoretical calculations.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex; 3 Figures, postscript, high-resolution printing (~1200dpi) is desire

    Interpolative Approach for Solving the Anderson Impurity Model

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    A rational representation for the self--energy is explored to interpolate the solution of the Anderson impurity model in general orbitally degenerate case. Several constrains such as the Friedel's sum rule, positions of the Hubbard bands as well as the value of quasiparticle residue are used to establish the equations for the coefficients of the interpolation. We employ two fast techniques, the slave--boson mean--field and the Hubbard I approximations to determine the functional dependence of the coefficients on doping, degeneracy and the strength of the interaction. The obtained spectral functions and self--energies are in good agreement with the results of numerically exact quantum Monte Carlo method.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure

    Linear-response theory and lattice dynamics: a muffin-tin orbital approach

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    A detailed description of a method for calculating static linear-response functions in the problem of lattice dynamics is presented. The method is based on density functional theory and it uses linear muffin-tin orbitals as a basis for representing first-order corrections to the one-electron wave functions. As an application we calculate phonon dispersions in Si and NbC and find good agreement with experiments.Comment: 18 pages, Revtex, 2 ps figures, uuencoded, gzip'ed, tar'ed fil

    Extracting the electron--boson spectral function α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from infrared and photoemission data using inverse theory

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    We present a new method of extracting electron-boson spectral function α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from infrared and photoemission data. This procedure is based on inverse theory and will be shown to be superior to previous techniques. Numerical implementation of the algorithm is presented in detail and then used to accurately determine the doping and temperature dependence of the spectral function in several families of high-Tc_c superconductors. Principal limitations of extracting α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) from experimental data will be pointed out. We directly compare the IR and ARPES α2\alpha^2F(ω\omega) and discuss the resonance structure in the spectra in terms of existing theoretical models

    Correlation effects in the ground state charge density of Mott-insulating NiO: a comparison of ab-initio calculations and high-energy electron diffraction measurements

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    Accurate high-energy electron diffraction measurements of structure factors of NiO have been carried out to investigate how strong correlations in the Ni 3d shell affect electron charge density in the interior area of nickel ions and whether the new ab-initio approaches to the electronic structure of strongly correlated metal oxides are in accord with experimental observations. The generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and the local spin density approximation corrected by the Hubbard U term (LSDA+U) are found to provide the closest match to experimental measurements. The comparison of calculated and observed electron charge densities shows that correlations in the Ni 3d shell suppress covalent bonding between the oxygen and nickel sublattices.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX and 5 figures in the postscript forma

    CREATING A MATHEMATICAL MODEL OF A QUEUING SYSTEM SUPERMARKET

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    Today, the Russian retail market, there is a problem to optimize the use of existing resources. This problem is related to the saturation of the market due to the economic trend. One solution to this problem is to use mathematical models to optimize existing resources. This paper describes a mathematical model for the optimization of retail space supermarket

    Pressure-dependence of electron-phonon coupling and the superconducting phase in hcp Fe - a linear response study

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    A recent experiment by Shimizu et al. has provided evidence of a superconducting phase in hcp Fe under pressure. To study the pressure-dependence of this superconducting phase we have calculated the phonon frequencies and the electron-phonon coupling in hcp Fe as a function of the lattice parameter, using the linear response (LR) scheme and the full potential linear muffin-tin orbital (FP-LMTO) method. Calculated phonon spectra and the Eliashberg functions α2F\alpha^2 F indicate that conventional s-wave electron-phonon coupling can definitely account for the appearance of the superconducting phase in hcp Fe. However, the observed change in the transition temperature with increasing pressure is far too rapid compared with the calculated results. For comparison with the linear response results, we have computed the electron-phonon coupling also by using the rigid muffin-tin (RMT) approximation. From both the LR and the RMT results it appears that electron-phonon interaction alone cannot explain the small range of volume over which superconductivity is observed. It is shown that ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations as well as scattering from magnetic impurities (spin-ordered clusters) can account for the observed values of the transition temperatures but cannot substantially improve the agreeemnt between the calculated and observed presure/volume range of the superconducting phase. A simplified treatment of p-wave pairing leads to extremely small (102\leq 10^{-2} K) transition temperatures. Thus our calculations seem to rule out both ss- and pp- wave superconductivity in hcp Fe.Comment: 12 pages, submitted to PR

    The influence of defects on magnetic properties of fcc-Pu

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    The influence of vacancies and interstitial atoms on magnetism in Pu has been considered in frames of the Density Functional Theory (DFT). The relaxation of crystal structure arising due to different types of defects was calculated using the molecular dynamic method with modified embedded atom model (MEAM). The LDA+U+SO (Local Density Approximation with explicit inclusion of Coulomb and spin-orbital interactions) method in matrix invariant form was applied to describe correlation effects in Pu with these types of defects. The calculations show that both vacancies and interstitials give rise to local moments in ff-shell of Pu in good agreement with experimental data for annealed Pu. Magnetism appears due to destroying of delicate balance between spin-orbital and exchange interactions.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure

    Importance of Correlation Effects on Magnetic Anisotropy in Fe and Ni

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    We calculate magnetic anisotropy energy of Fe and Ni by taking into account the effects of strong electronic correlations, spin-orbit coupling, and non-collinearity of intra-atomic magnetization. The LDA+U method is used and its equivalence to dynamical mean-field theory in the static limit is emphasized. Both experimental magnitude of MAE and direction of magnetization are predicted correctly near U=4 eV for Ni and U=3.5 eV for Fe. Correlations modify one-electron spectra which are now in better agreement with experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Phonon-induced spin relaxation of conduction electrons in aluminum

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    Spin-flip Eliashberg function αS2F\alpha_S^2F and temperature-dependent spin relaxation time T1(T)T_1(T) are calculated for aluminum using realistic pseudopotentials. The spin-flip electron-phonon coupling constant λS\lambda_S is found to be 2.5×1052.5\times 10^{-5}. The calculations agree with experiments validating the Elliott-Yafet theory and the spin-hot-spot picture of spin relaxation for polyvalent metals.Comment: 4 pages; submitted to PR
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