326 research outputs found

    An algorithm for twisted fusion rules

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    We present an algorithm for an efficient calculation of the fusion rules of twisted representations of untwisted affine Lie algebras. These fusion rules appear in WZW orbifold theories and as annulus coefficients in boundary WZW theories; they provide NIM-reps of the WZW fusion rules.Comment: 8 page

    Conformal boundary conditions and 3D topological field theory

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    Topological field theory in three dimensions provides a powerful tool to construct correlation functions and to describe boundary conditions in two-dimensional conformal field theories.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. Invited talk by C.S. at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Statistical Field Theories, Como, June 200

    Induced order and reentrant melting in classical two-dimensional binary clusters

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    A binary system of classical charged particles interacting through a dipole repulsive potential and confined in a two-dimensional hardwall trap is studied by Brownian dynamics simulations. We found that the presence of small particles \emph{stabilizes} the angular order of the system as a consequence of radial fluctuations of the small particles. There is an optimum in the increased rigidity of the cluster as function of the number of small particles. The small (i.e. defect) particles melt at a lower temperature compared to the big particles and exhibit a \emph{reentrant} behavior in its radial order that is induced by the intershell rotation of the big particles.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Piezoelectric mechanism of orientation of a bilayer Wigner crystal in a GaAs matrix

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    A mechanism for orientation of bilayer classical Wigner crystals in a piezoelectric medium is considered. For the GaAs system the piezoelectric correction to the electrostatic interaction between electrons is calculated. It is shown that taking into account the correction due to the piezoelectric effect leads to a dependence of the total energy of the electron crystal on its orientation with respect to the crystallographic axes of the surrounding matrix. A generalization of Ewald's method is obtained for calculating the anisotropic interaction between electrons in a Wigner crystal. The method is used to calculate the energy of bilayer Wigner crystals in electron layers parallel to the crystallographic planes (001), (0-11), and (111) as a function of their orientation and the distance between layers, and the energetically most favorable orientation for all types of electron lattices in a bilayer system is found. It is shown that phase transitions between structures with different lattice symmetry in a Wigner crystal can be accompanied by a change of its orientation.Comment: 11 pages, 4 eps figures include

    Suppression of Superconductivity in Mesoscopic Superconductors

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    We propose a new boundary-driven phase transition associated with vortex nucleation in mesoscopic superconductors (of size of the order of, or larger than, the penetration depth). We derive the rescaling equations and we show that boundary effects associated with vortex nucleation lowers the conventional transition temperature in mesoscopic superconductors by an amount which is a function of the size of the superconductor. This result explains recent experiments in small superconductors where it was found that the transition temperature depends on the size of the system and is lower than the critical Berezinsk\u{i}-Kosterlitz-Thouless temperature.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Vol. 86 (15 Jan. 2001

    Metastability and paramagnetism in superconducting mesoscopic disks

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    A projected order parameter is used to calculate, not only local minima of the Ginzburg-Landau energy functional, but also saddle points or energy barriers responsible for the metastabilities observed in superconducting mesoscopic disks (Geim et al. Nature {\bf 396}, 144 (1998)). We calculate the local minima magnetization and find the energetic instability points between vortex configurations with different vorticity. We also find that, for any vorticity, the supercurrent can reverse its flow direction on decreasing the magnetic field before one vortex can escape.Comment: Modified version as to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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