113 research outputs found
Exchange and spin Jahn-Teller distortions for a triangular cluster of spin-1/2
We study the effects of magnetoelastic coupling on the degenerate ground
state of the spin-1/2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model for the regular
triangular spin cluster. Static displacement of spins spontaneously lifts the
degeneracy of the ground state through the distance dependence of exchange
coupling, i.e., a spin Jahn-Teller mechanism takes place. On the other hand,
dynamical displacement does not lift the degeneracy, though the cluster
distorts spontaneously. The energy decrease obtained by dynamical theory is
twice as large as that obtained by static theory because of quantum
fluctuation.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Accepted by JPSJ. Clarified some setences.
Corrected typo
Magnetoelectric domain wall dynamics and its implications for magnetoelectric memory
Domain wall dynamics in a magnetoelectric antiferromagnet is analyzed, and
its implications for magnetoelectric memory applications are discussed.
CrO is used in the estimates of the materials parameters. It is found
that the domain wall mobility has a maximum as a function of the electric field
due to the gyrotropic coupling induced by it. In CrO the maximal
mobility of 0.1 m/(sOe) is reached at V/nm. Fields of
this order may be too weak to overcome the intrinsic depinning field, which is
estimated for B-doped CrO. These major drawbacks for device
implementation can be overcome by applying a small in-plane shear strain, which
blocks the domain wall precession. Domain wall mobility of about 0.7
m/(sOe) can then be achieved at V/nm. A split-gate scheme is
proposed for the domain-wall controlled bit element; its extension to
multiple-gate linear arrays can offer advantages in memory density,
programmability, and logic functionality.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, revised and corrected version, accepted in
Applied Physics Letter
A new method for deriving the stellar birth function of resolved stellar populations
We present a new method for deriving the stellar birth function (SBF) of resolved stellar populations. The SBF (stars born per unit mass, time, and metallicity) is the combination of the initial mass function (IMF), the star formation history (SFH), and the metallicity distribution function (MDF). The framework of our analysis is that of Poisson Point Processes (PPPs), a class of statistical models suitable when dealing with points (stars) in a multidimensional space (the measurement space of multiple photometric bands). The theory of PPPs easily accommodates the modeling of measurement errors as well as that of incompleteness. Our method avoids binning stars in the color-magnitude diagram and uses the whole likelihood function for each data point; combining the individual likelihoods allows the computation of the posterior probability for the population's SBF. Within the proposed framework it is possible to include nuisance parameters, such as distance and extinction, by specifying their prior distributions and marginalizing over them. The aim of this paper is to assess the validity of this new approach under a range of assumptions, using only simulated data. Forthcoming work will show applications to real data. Although it has a broad scope of possible applications, we have developed this method to study multi-band Hubble Space Telescope observations of the Milky Way Bulge. Therefore we will focus on simulations with characteristics similar to those of the Galactic Bulge
Structural, orbital, and magnetic order in vanadium spinels
Vanadium spinels (ZnV_2O_4, MgV_2O_4, and CdV_2O_4) exhibit a sequence of
structural and magnetic phase transitions, reflecting the interplay of lattice,
orbital, and spin degrees of freedom. We offer a theoretical model taking into
account the relativistic spin-orbit interaction, collective Jahn-Teller effect,
and spin frustration. Below the structural transition, vanadium ions exhibit
ferroorbital order and the magnet is best viewed as two sets of
antiferromagnetic chains with a single-ion Ising anisotropy. Magnetic order,
parametrized by two Ising variables, appears at a tetracritical point.Comment: v3: streamlined introductio
Dynamical Structure Factor of the Three-Dimensional Quantum Spin Liquid Candidate NaCaNi2F7
We study the dynamical structure factor of the spin-1 pyrochlore material NaCaNi2F7, which is well described by a weakly perturbed nearest-neighbour Heisenberg Hamiltonian, Our three approaches- molecular dynamics simulations, stochastic dynamical theory, and linear spin wave theory-reproduce remarkably well the momentum dependence of the experimental inelastic neutron scattering intensity as well as its energy dependence with the exception of the lowest energies. We discuss two surprising aspects and their implications for quantum spin liquids in general: the complete lack of sharp quasiparticle excitations in momentum space and the success of the linear spin wave theory in a regime where it would be expected to fail for several reasons
Classical Topological Order in Kagome Ice
We examine the onset of classical topological order in a nearest-neighbor
kagome ice model. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we characterize the
topological sectors of the groundstate using a non-local cut measure which
circumscribes the toroidal geometry of the simulation cell. We demonstrate that
simulations which employ global loop updates that are allowed to wind around
the periodic boundaries cause the topological sector to fluctuate, while
restricted local loop updates freeze the simulation into one topological
sector. The freezing into one topological sector can also be observed in the
susceptibility of the real magnetic spin vectors projected onto the kagome
plane. The ability of the susceptibility to distinguish between fluctuating and
non-fluctuating topological sectors should motivate its use as a local probe of
topological order in a variety of related model and experimental systems.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Spin fluctuations and pseudogap in the two-dimensional half-filled Hubbard model at weak coupling
Starting from the Hubbard model in the weak-coupling limit, we derive a
spin-fermion model where the collective spin excitations are described by a
non-linear sigma model. This result is used to compute the fermion spectral
function in the low-temperature regime where the
antiferromagnetic (AF) coherence length is exponentially large (``renormalized
classical'' regime). At the Fermi level, exhibits two
peaks around (with the mean-field gap), which are
precursors of the zero-temperature AF bands, separated by a pseudogap.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, revised versio
Dispersion of the neutron resonance in cuprate superconductors
We argue that recently measured downward dispersion of the neutron resonance
peak in cuprate superconductors is naturally explained if the resonance is
viewed as a spin-1 collective mode in a d-wave superconductor. The reduction of
the resonant frequency away from the antiferromagnetic wave vector is a direct
consequence of the momentum dependence of the d-wave superconducting gap. When
the magnetic correlation length becomes large, the dispersion should become
magnon-like, i.e., curve upwards from (pi,pi).Comment: 4 pages, 3 inline PostScript figures. Added reference
- …