11,637 research outputs found
Spin state transition in LaCoO3 by variational cluster approximation
The variational cluster approximation is applied to the calculation of
thermodynamical quantities and single-particle spectra of LaCoO3. Trial
self-energies and the numerical value of the Luttinger-Ward functional are
obtained by exact diagonalization of a CoO6 cluster. The VCA correctly predicts
LaCoO3 as a paramagnetic insulator and a gradual and relatively smooth increase
of the occupation of high-spin Co3+ ions causes the temperature dependence of
entropy and magnetic susceptibility. The single particle spectral function
agrees well with experiment, the experimentally observed temperature dependence
of photoelectron spectra is reproduced satisfactorily. Remaining discrepancies
with experiment highlight the importance of spin orbit coupling and local
lattice relaxation.Comment: Revtex file with 10 eps figure
Correlated band structure of NiO, CoO and MnO by variational cluster approximation
The variational cluster approximation proposed by Potthoff is applied to the
calculation of the single-particle spectral function of the transition metal
oxides MnO, CoO and NiO. Trial self-energies and the numerical value of the
Luttinger-Ward functional are obtained by exact diagonalization of a
TMO6-cluster. The single-particle parameters of this cluster serve as
variational parameters to construct a stationary point of the grand potential
of the lattice system. The stationary point is found by a crossover procedure
which allows to go continuously from an array of disconnected clusters to the
lattice system. The self-energy is found to contain irrelevant degrees of
freedom which have marginal impact on the grand potential and which need to be
excluded to obtain meaningful results. The obtained spectral functions are in
good agreement with experimental data.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figure
A priori probability that a qubit-qutrit pair is separable
We extend to arbitrarily coupled pairs of qubits (two-state quantum systems)
and qutrits (three-state quantum systems) our earlier study (quant-ph/0207181),
which was concerned with the simplest instance of entangled quantum systems,
pairs of qubits. As in that analysis -- again on the basis of numerical
(quasi-Monte Carlo) integration results, but now in a still higher-dimensional
space (35-d vs. 15-d) -- we examine a conjecture that the Bures/SD (statistical
distinguishability) probability that arbitrarily paired qubits and qutrits are
separable (unentangled) has a simple exact value, u/(v Pi^3)= >.00124706, where
u = 2^20 3^3 5 7 and v = 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 (the product of consecutive
primes). This is considerably less than the conjectured value of the Bures/SD
probability, 8/(11 Pi^2) = 0736881, in the qubit-qubit case. Both of these
conjectures, in turn, rely upon ones to the effect that the SD volumes of
separable states assume certain remarkable forms, involving "primorial"
numbers. We also estimate the SD area of the boundary of separable qubit-qutrit
states, and provide preliminary calculations of the Bures/SD probability of
separability in the general qubit-qubit-qubit and qutrit-qutrit cases.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, LaTeX, we utilize recent exact
computations of Sommers and Zyczkowski (quant-ph/0304041) of "the Bures
volume of mixed quantum states" to refine our conjecture
Traveling sealer for contoured table Patent
Sealing apparatus for joining two pieces of frangible material
Bures distance between two displaced thermal states
The Bures distance between two displaced thermal states and the corresponding
geometric quantities (statistical metric, volume element, scalar curvature) are
computed. Under nonunitary (dissipative) dynamics, the statistical distance
shows the same general features previously reported in the literature by
Braunstein and Milburn for two--state systems. The scalar curvature turns out
to have new interesting properties when compared to the curvature associated
with squeezed thermal states.Comment: 3 pages, RevTeX, no figure
Spin-dependent transport in molecular tunnel junctions
We present measurements of magnetic tunnel junctions made using a
self-assembled-monolayer molecular barrier. Ni/octanethiol/Ni samples were
fabricated in a nanopore geometry. The devices exhibit significant changes in
resistance as the angle between the magnetic moments in the two electrodes is
varied, demonstrating that low-energy electrons can traverse the molecular
barrier while maintaining spin coherence. An analysis of the voltage and
temperature dependence of the data suggests that the spin-coherent transport
signals can be degraded by localized states in the molecular barriers.Comment: 4 pages, 5 color figure
On the ab initio calculation of CVV Auger spectra in closed-shell systems
We propose an ab initio method to evaluate the core-valence-valence (CVV)
Auger spectrum of systems with filled valence bands. The method is based on the
Cini-Sawatzky theory, and aims at estimating the parameters by first-principles
calculations in the framework of density-functional theory (DFT). Photoemission
energies and the interaction energy for the two holes in the final state are
evaluated by performing DFT simulations for the system with varied population
of electronic levels. Transition matrix elements are taken from atomic results.
The approach takes into account the non-sphericity of the density of states of
the emitting atom, spin-orbit interaction in core and valence, and non
quadratic terms in the total energy expansion with respect to fractional
occupation numbers. It is tested on two benchmark systems, Zn and Cu metals,
leading in both cases to L23M45M45 Auger peaks within 2 eV from the
experimental ones. Detailed analysis is presented on the relative weight of the
various contributions considered in our method, providing the basis for future
development. Especially problematic is the evaluation of the hole-hole
interaction for systems with broad valence bands: our method underestimates its
value in Cu, while we obtain excellent results for this quantity in Zn.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Volume of the quantum mechanical state space
The volume of the quantum mechanical state space over -dimensional real,
complex and quaternionic Hilbert-spaces with respect to the canonical Euclidean
measure is computed, and explicit formulas are presented for the expected value
of the determinant in the general setting too. The case when the state space is
endowed with a monotone metric or a pull-back metric is considered too, we give
formulas to compute the volume of the state space with respect to the given
Riemannian metric. We present the volume of the space of qubits with respect to
various monotone metrics. It turns out that the volume of the space of qubits
can be infinite too. We characterize those monotone metrics which generates
infinite volume.Comment: 17 page
High-Temperature Expansions of Bures and Fisher Information Priors
For certain infinite and finite-dimensional thermal systems, we obtain ---
incorporating quantum-theoretic considerations into Bayesian thermostatistical
investigations of Lavenda --- high-temperature expansions of priors over
inverse temperature beta induced by volume elements ("quantum Jeffreys' priors)
of Bures metrics. Similarly to Lavenda's results based on volume elements
(Jeffreys' priors) of (classical) Fisher information metrics, we find that in
the limit beta -> 0, the quantum-theoretic priors either conform to Jeffreys'
rule for variables over [0,infinity], by being proportional to 1/beta, or to
the Bayes-Laplace principle of insufficient reason, by being constant. Whether
a system adheres to one rule or to the other appears to depend upon its number
of degrees of freedom.Comment: Six pages, LaTeX. The title has been shortened (and then further
modified), at the suggestion of a colleague. Other minor change
Microscopic thickness determination of thin graphite films formed on SiC from quantized oscillation in reflectivity of low-energy electrons
Low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM) was used to measure the reflectivity of
low-energy electrons from graphitized SiC(0001). The reflectivity shows
distinct quantized oscillations as a function of the electron energy and
graphite thickness. Conduction bands in thin graphite films form discrete
energy levels whose wave vectors are normal to the surface. Resonance of the
incident electrons with these quantized conduction band states enhances
electrons to transmit through the film into the SiC substrate, resulting in
dips in the reflectivity. The dip positions are well explained using
tight-binding and first-principles calculations. The graphite thickness
distribution can be determined microscopically from LEEM reflectivity
measurements.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
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