44,145 research outputs found

    Congruences and Canonical Forms for a Positive Matrix: Application to the Schweinler-Wigner Extremum Principle

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    It is shown that a N×NN\times N real symmetric [complex hermitian] positive definite matrix VV is congruent to a diagonal matrix modulo a pseudo-orthogonal [pseudo-unitary] matrix in SO(m,n)SO(m,n) [ SU(m,n)SU(m,n)], for any choice of partition N=m+nN=m+n. It is further shown that the method of proof in this context can easily be adapted to obtain a rather simple proof of Williamson's theorem which states that if NN is even then VV is congruent also to a diagonal matrix modulo a symplectic matrix in Sp(N,R)Sp(N,{\cal R}) [Sp(N,C)Sp(N,{\cal C})]. Applications of these results considered include a generalization of the Schweinler-Wigner method of `orthogonalization based on an extremum principle' to construct pseudo-orthogonal and symplectic bases from a given set of linearly independent vectors.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figure

    Determining the spin-orbit coupling via spin-polarized spectroscopy of magnetic impurities

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    We study the spin-resolved spectral properties of the impurity states associated to the presence of magnetic impurities in two-dimensional, as well as one-dimensional systems with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. We focus on Shiba bound states in superconducting materials, as well as on impurity states in metallic systems. Using a combination of a numerical T-matrix approximation and a direct analytical calculation of the bound state wave function, we compute the local density of states (LDOS) together with its Fourier transform (FT). We find that the FT of the spin-polarized LDOS, a quantity accessible via spin-polarized STM, allows to accurately extract the strength of the spin-orbit coupling. Also we confirm that the presence of magnetic impurities is strictly necessary for such measurement, and that non-spin-polarized experiments cannot have access to the value of the spin-orbit coupling.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figure

    Hamilton's Turns for the Lorentz Group

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    Hamilton in the course of his studies on quaternions came up with an elegant geometric picture for the group SU(2). In this picture the group elements are represented by ``turns'', which are equivalence classes of directed great circle arcs on the unit sphere S2S^2, in such a manner that the rule for composition of group elements takes the form of the familiar parallelogram law for the Euclidean translation group. It is only recently that this construction has been generalized to the simplest noncompact group SU(1,1)=Sp(2,R)=SL(2,R)SU(1,1) = Sp(2, R) = SL(2,R), the double cover of SO(2,1). The present work develops a theory of turns for SL(2,C)SL(2,C), the double and universal cover of SO(3,1) and SO(3,C)SO(3,C), rendering a geometric representation in the spirit of Hamilton available for all low dimensional semisimple Lie groups of interest in physics. The geometric construction is illustrated through application to polar decomposition, and to the composition of Lorentz boosts and the resulting Wigner or Thomas rotation.Comment: 13 pages, Late
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