21 research outputs found
Multi-particle composites in density-imbalanced quantum fluids
We consider two-component one-dimensional quantum gases with density
imbalance. While generically such fluids are two-component Luttinger liquids,
we show that if the ratio of the densities is a rational number, p/q, and mass
asymmetry between components is sufficiently strong, one of the two eigenmodes
acquires a gap. The gapped phase corresponds to (algebraic) ordering of
(p+q)-particle composites. In particular, for attractive mixtures, this implies
that the superconducting correlations are destroyed. We illustrate our
predictions by numerical simulations of the fermionic Hubbard model with
hopping asymmetry.Comment: 4+ pages, 1 figure, published versio
Dipolar gases in quasi one-dimensional geometries
We analyze the physics of cold dipolar gases in quasi one-dimensional
geometries, showing that the confinement-induced scattering resonances produced
by the transversal trapping are crucially affected by the dipole-dipole
interaction. As a consequence, the dipolar interaction may drastically change
the properties of quasi-1D dipolar condensates, even for situations in which
the dipolar interaction would be completely overwhelmed by the short-range
interactions in a 3D environment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Dephasing in the electronic Mach-Zehnder interferometer at filling factor 2
We propose a simple physical model which describes dephasing in the
electronic Mach-Zehnder interferometer at filling factor 2. This model explains
very recent experimental results, such as the unusual lobe-type structure in
the visibility of Aharonov-Bohm oscillations, phase rigidity, and the asymmetry
of the visibility as a function of transparencies of quantum point contacts.
According to our model, dephasing in the interferometer originates from strong
Coulomb interaction at the edge of two-dimensional electron gas. The long-range
character of the interaction leads to a separation of the spectrum of edge
excitations on slow and fast mode. These modes are excited by electron
tunneling and carry away the phase information. The new energy scale associated
with the slow mode determines the temperature dependence of the visibility and
the period of its oscillations as a function of voltage bias. Moreover, the
variation of the lobe structure from one experiment to another is explained by
specific charging effects, which are different in all experiments. We propose
to use a strongly asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer with one arm being
much shorter than the other for the spectroscopy of quantum Hall edge states.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
Energy relaxation at quantum Hall edge
In this work we address the recent experiment of Altimiras and collaborators,
where an electron distribution function at the quantum Hall (QH) edge at
filling factor 2 has been measured with high precision. It has been reported
that the energy of electrons injected into one of the two chiral edge channels
with the help of a quantum point contact (QPC) is equally distributed between
them, in agreement with earlier predictions, one being based on the Fermi gas
approach, and the other utilizing the Luttinger liquid theory. We argue that
the physics of the energy relaxation process at the QH edge may in fact be more
rich, providing the possibility for discriminating between two physical
pictures in experiment. Namely, using the recently proposed non-equilibrium
bosonization technique we evaluate the electron distribution function and find
that the initial "double-step" distribution created at a QPC evolves through
several intermediate asymptotics, before reaching eventual equilibrium state.
At short distances the distribution function is found to be asymmetric due to
non-Gaussian current noise effects. At larger distances, where noise becomes
Gaussian, the distribution function acquires symmetric Lorentzian shape.
Importantly, in the regime of low QPC transparencies T the width of the
Lorentzian scales linearly with T, in contrast to the case of equilibrium Fermi
distribution, whose width scales as square root of T. Therefore, we propose to
do measurements at low QPC transparencies. We suggest that the missing energy
paradox may be explained by the nonlinear dispersion of the spectrum of edge
states.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Crossover of superconducting properties and kinetic-energy gain in two-dimensional Hubbard model
Superconductivity in the Hubbard model on a square lattice near half filling
is studied using an optimization (or correlated) variational Monte Carlo
method. Second-order processes of the strong-coupling expansion are considered
in the wave functions beyond the Gutzwiller factor. Superconductivity of
d_x^2-y^2-wave is widely stable, and exhibits a crossover around U=U_co\sim 12t
from a BCS type to a new type. For U\gsim U_co (U\lsim U_co), the energy gain
in the superconducting state is derived from the kinetic (potential) energy.
Condensation energy is large and \propto exp(-t/J) [tiny] on the strong [weak]
coupling side of U_co. Cuprates belong to the strong-coupling regime.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Spin and Charge Structure Factor of the 2-d Hubbard Model
The spin and charge structure factors are calculated for the Hubbard model on
the square lattice near half-filling using a spin-rotation invariant six-slave
boson representation. The charge structure factor shows a broad maximum at the
zone corner and is found to decrease monotonically with increasing interaction
strength and electron density and increasing temperature. The spin structure
factor develops with increasing interaction two incommensurate peaks at the
zone boundary and along the zone diagonal. Comparison with results of Quantum
Monte Carlo and variational calculations is carried out and the agreement is
found to be good. The limitations of an RPA-type approach are pointed out.Comment: 18 pages, revtex, 13 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Ultracold atomic gases in optical lattices: mimicking condensed matter physics and beyond
We review recent developments in the physics of ultracold atomic and
molecular gases in optical lattices. Such systems are nearly perfect
realisations of various kinds of Hubbard models, and as such may very well
serve to mimic condensed matter phenomena. We show how these systems may be
employed as quantum simulators to answer some challenging open questions of
condensed matter, and even high energy physics. After a short presentation of
the models and the methods of treatment of such systems, we discuss in detail,
which challenges of condensed matter physics can be addressed with (i)
disordered ultracold lattice gases, (ii) frustrated ultracold gases, (iii)
spinor lattice gases, (iv) lattice gases in "artificial" magnetic fields, and,
last but not least, (v) quantum information processing in lattice gases. For
completeness, also some recent progress related to the above topics with
trapped cold gases will be discussed.Comment: Review article. v2: published version, 135 pages, 34 figure
The Flux-Line Lattice in Superconductors
Magnetic flux can penetrate a type-II superconductor in form of Abrikosov
vortices. These tend to arrange in a triangular flux-line lattice (FLL) which
is more or less perturbed by material inhomogeneities that pin the flux lines,
and in high- supercon- ductors (HTSC's) also by thermal fluctuations. Many
properties of the FLL are well described by the phenomenological
Ginzburg-Landau theory or by the electromagnetic London theory, which treats
the vortex core as a singularity. In Nb alloys and HTSC's the FLL is very soft
mainly because of the large magnetic penetration depth: The shear modulus of
the FLL is thus small and the tilt modulus is dispersive and becomes very small
for short distortion wavelength. This softness of the FLL is enhanced further
by the pronounced anisotropy and layered structure of HTSC's, which strongly
increases the penetration depth for currents along the c-axis of these uniaxial
crystals and may even cause a decoupling of two-dimensional vortex lattices in
the Cu-O layers. Thermal fluctuations and softening may melt the FLL and cause
thermally activated depinning of the flux lines or of the 2D pancake vortices
in the layers. Various phase transitions are predicted for the FLL in layered
HTSC's. The linear and nonlinear magnetic response of HTSC's gives rise to
interesting effects which strongly depend on the geometry of the experiment.Comment: Review paper for Rep.Prog.Phys., 124 narrow pages. The 30 figures do
not exist as postscript file
Charged domain-wall dynamics in doped antiferromagnets and spin fluctuations in cuprate superconductors
Theoretical Physic