394 research outputs found
Spherical functions on the de Sitter group
Matrix elements and spherical functions of irreducible representations of the
de Sitter group are studied on the various homogeneous spaces of this group. It
is shown that a universal covering of the de Sitter group gives rise to
quaternion Euler angles. An explicit form of Casimir and Laplace-Beltrami
operators on the homogeneous spaces is given. Different expressions of the
matrix elements and spherical functions are given in terms of multiple
hypergeometric functions both for finite-dimensional and unitary
representations of the principal series of the de Sitter group.Comment: 40 page
Entropy per particle spikes in the transition metal dichalcogenides
We derive a general expression for the entropy per particle as a function of
chemical potential, temperature and gap magnitude for the single layer
transition metal dichalcogenides. The electronic excitations in these materials
can be approximately regarded as two species of the massive or gapped Dirac
fermions. Inside the smaller gap there is a region with zero density of states
where the dependence of the entropy per particle on the chemical potential
exhibits a huge dip-and-peak structure. The edge of the larger gap is
accompanied by the discontinuity of the density of states that results in the
peak in the dependence of the entropy per particle on the chemical potential.
The specificity of the transition metal dichalcogenides makes possible the
observation of these features at rather high temperatures order of 100 K. The
influence of the uniaxial strain on the entropy per particle is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; Special Issue to the 90th birthday of A.A.
Abrikoso
Electronic spectrum and tunnelling properties of multi-wall carbon nanotubes
We develop a general approach to calculations of the electron spectrum of
metallic multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWNT) with arbitrary number of coaxial
layers. It is based on the model with singular attractive potential of
equidistant conductive cylinders. The knowledge of one-electron spectrum allows
to construct the corresponding Green function and then to calculate the entropy
and density of states for MWNT. We analyze the tunnelling between the nanotube
and normal metal electrode. The possibility of direct determination of
one-electron density of states by measurements of the tunnelling conductivity
at low temperatures is proved and the necessary restrictions on temperature are
formulated. We discuss briefly the conflicting experimental observations of
electronic properties of MWNT.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
The Ferromagnetism in the Vicinity of Lifshitz Topological Transitions
We show that the critical temperature of a ferromagnetic phase transition in
a quasi-two-dimensional hole gas confined in a diluted magnetic semiconductor
quantum well strongly depends on the hole chemical potential and hole density.
The significant variations of the the Curie temperature occur close to the
Lifshitz topological transition points where the hole Fermi surface acquires
additional components of topological connectivity due to the filling of excited
size-quantization subbands. The model calculations demonstrate that the Curie
temperature can be doubled by a small variation of the gate voltage for the
CdMnTe/CdMgTe quantum well based device
Detection of topological phase transitions through entropy measurements: the case of germanene
We propose a characterization tool for studies of the band structure of new
materials promising for the observation of topological phase transitions. We
show that a specific resonant feature in the entropy per electron dependence on
the chemical potential may be considered as a fingerprint of the transition
between topological and trivial insulator phases. The entropy per electron in a
honeycomb two-dimensional crystal of germanene subjected to the external
electric field is obtained from the first principle calculation of the density
of electronic states and the Maxwell relation. We demonstrate that, in
agreement to the recent prediction of the analytical model, strong spikes in
the entropy per particle dependence on the chemical potential appear at low
temperatures. They are observed at the values of the applied bias both below
and above the critical value that corresponds to the transition between the
topological insulator and trivial insulator phases, while the giant resonant
feature in the vicinity of zero chemical potential is strongly suppressed at
the topological transition point, in the low temperature limit. In a wide
energy range, the van Hove singularities in the electronic density of states
manifest themselves as zeros in the entropy per particle dependence on the
chemical potential.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; final version published in PR
Temperature Dependence of the Cu(2) NQR Line Width in YBaCuO
Systematic measurements of the Cu(2) NQR line width were performed in
underdoped YBaCuO samples over the temperature range 4.2 K
K. It was shown that the copper NQR line width monotonically increases
upon lowering temperature in the below-critical region, resembling temperature
behavior of the superconducting gap. The observed dependence is explained by
the fact that the energy of a condensate of sliding charge-current states of
the charge-density-wave type depends on the phase of order parameter.
Calculations show that this dependence appears only at . Quantitative
estimates of the line broadening at agree with the measurement results.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Self-consistent calculation of nuclear photoabsorption cross section: Finite amplitude method with Skyrme functionals in the three-dimensional real space
The finite amplitude method (FAM), which we have recently proposed (T.
Nakatsukasa, T. Inakura, and K. Yabana, Phys. Rev. C 76, 024318 (2007)),
simplifies significantly the fully self-consistent RPA calculation. Employing
the FAM, we are conducting systematic, fully self-consistent response
calculations for a wide mass region. This paper is intended to present a
computational scheme to be used in the systematic investigation and to show the
performance of the FAM for a realistic Skyrme energy functional. We implemented
the method in the mixed representation in which the forward and backward RPA
amplitudes are represented by indices of single-particle orbitals for occupied
states and the spatial grid points for unoccupied states. We solve the linear
response equation for a given frequency. The equation is a linear algebraic
problem with a sparse non-hermitian matrix, which is solved with an iterative
method. We show results of the dipole response for selected spherical and
deformed nuclei. The peak energies of the giant dipole resonance agree well
with measurements for heavy nuclei, while they are systematically
underestimated for light nuclei. We also discuss the width of the giant dipole
resonance in the fully self-consistent RPA calculation.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
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