169 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
Flux expulsion and greedy bosons: frustrated magnets at large N
We investigate the Sp(N) mean-field theory for frustrated quantum magnets.
First, we establish some general properties of its solutions; in particular,
for small spin we propose simple rules for determining the saddle points of
optimal energy. We then apply these insights to the pyrochlore lattice. For
spins on a single tetrahedron, we demonstrate a continuous ground state
degeneracy for any value of the spin length. For the full pyrochlore lattice,
this degeneracy translates to a large number of near-degenerate potential
saddle points. Remarkably, it is impossible to construct a saddle point with
the full symmetry of the Hamiltonian--at large N, the pyrochlore magnet CANNOT
be a spin liquid. Nonetheless, for realistic finite values of N, tunnelling
between the nearly degenerate saddle points could restore the full symmetry of
the Hamiltonian.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figure
Cooper pairs as low-energy excitations in the normal state
We discuss the normal state of a fermionic system in an idealized PSEUDOGAP
REGIME, . Stable Cooper pairs induce a
pseudogap of width in the fermion energy spectrum. Near two
dimensions, we find a Bose-like condensation temperature in this predominantly
fermionic system.Comment: 2 pages, LaTeX, espcrc2.sty file included. An outline of a
presentation at the Beijing conference M2S-HTSC-V. To be published in Physica
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
Partial order from disorder in a classical pyrochlore antiferromagnet
We investigate theoretically the phase diagram of a classical Heisenberg
antiferromagnet on the pyrochlore lattice perturbed by a weak second-neighbor
interaction J_2. The huge ground state degeneracy of the nearest-neighbor
Heisenberg spins is lifted by J_2 and a magnetically ordered ground state sets
in upon approaching zero temperature. We have found a new, partially ordered
phase with collinear spins at finite temperatures for a ferromagnetic J_2. In
addition to a large nematic order parameter, this intermediate phase also
exhibits a layered structure and a bond order that breaks the sublattice
symmetry. Thermodynamic phase boundaries separating it from the fully
disordered and magnetically ordered states scale as 1.87 J_2 S^2 and 0.26 J_2
S^2 in the limit of small J_2. The phase transitions are discontinuous. We
analytically examine the local stability of the collinear state and obtain a
boundary T ~ J_2^2/J_1 in agreement with Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 14 pages revtex, revised phase diagram, references adde
Field-induced gap in ordered Heisenberg antiferromagnets
Heisenberg antiferromagnets in a strong uniform magnetic field are
expected to exhibit a gapless phase with a global O(2) symmetry. In many real
magnets, a small energy gap is induced by additional interactions that can be
viewed as a staggered transverse magnetic field , where is a small
proportionality constant. We study the effects of such a perturbation,
particularly for magnets with long-range order, by using several complimentary
approaches: numerical diagonalizations of a model with long-range interactions,
classical equations of motion, and scaling arguments. In an ordered state at
zero temperature, the energy gap at first grows as and then may
dip to a smaller value, of order , at the quantum critical point
separating the ``gapless'' phase from the gapped state with saturated
magnetization. In one spatial dimension, the latter exponent changes to 4/5.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Quantum spin liquids: a large-S route
This paper explores the large-S route to quantum disorder in the Heisenberg
antiferromagnet on the pyrochlore lattice and its homologues in lower
dimensions. It is shown that zero-point fluctuations of spins shape up a
valence-bond solid at low temperatures for one two-dimensional lattice and a
liquid with very short-range valence-bond correlations for another. A
one-dimensional model demonstrates potential significance of quantum
interference effects (as in Haldane's gap): the quantum melting of a
valence-bond order yields different valence-bond liquids for integer and
half-integer values of S.Comment: Proceedings of Highly Frustrated Magnetism 2003 (Grenoble), 6 LaTeX
page
Topological defects in flat nanomagnets: the magnetostatic limit
We discuss elementary topological defects in soft magnetic nanoparticles in
the thin-film geometry. In the limit dominated by magnetostatic forces the
low-energy defects are vortices (winding number n = +1), cross ties (n = -1),
and edge defects with n = -1/2. We obtain topological constraints on the
possible composition of domain walls. The simplest domain wall in this regime
is composed of two -1/2 edge defects and a vortex, in accordance with
observations and numerics.Comment: 3 pages, eps figures. Proceedings of MMM 0
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