486 research outputs found
Thermal nonlocal Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model in the real time formalism
The real-time formalism at finite temperature and chemical potential for the
nonlocal Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model is developed in the presence of a Gaussian
covariant regulator. We construct the most general thermal propagator, by means
of the spectral function. As a result, the model involves the propagation of
massive quasiparticles. The appearance of complex poles is interpreted as a
confinement signal, and in this case we have unstable quasiparticles with a
finite decay width. An expression for the propagator along the critical line,
where complex poles start to appear, is also obtained. A generalization to
other covariant regulators is proposed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, minor changes, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Non-dissipative anomalous currents in 2D materials: the parity magnetic effect as an analog of the chiral magnetic effect
Anomalous electric currents along a magnetic field, first predicted to emerge
during large heavy ion collision experiments, were also observed a few years
ago in condensed matter environments, exploring the fact that charge carriers
in Dirac/Weyl semi-metals exhibit a relativistic-like behavior. The mechanism
through which such currents are generated relies on an imbalance in the
chirality of systems immersed in a magnetic background, leading to the
so-called chiral magnetic effect (CME). While chiral magnetic currents have
been observed in materials in three space dimensions, in this work we propose
that an analog of the chiral magnetic effect can be constructed in two space
dimensions, corresponding to a novel type of intrinsic half-integer Quantum
Hall effect, thereby also offering a topological protection mechanism for the
current. While the 3D chiral anomaly underpins the CME, its 2D cousin is
emerging from the 2D parity anomaly, we thence call it the parity magnetic
effect (PME). It can occur in disturbed honeycomb lattices where both spin
degeneracy and time reversal symmetry are broken. These configurations harbor
two distinct gap-opening mechanisms that, when occurring simultaneously, drive
slightly different gaps in each valley, establishing an analog of the necessary
chiral imbalance. Some examples of promising material setups that fulfill the
prerequisites of our proposal are also listed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Thermal Uhlmann phase in a locally driven two-spin system
We study the geometric Uhlmann phase of mixed states at finite temperature in
a system of two coupled spin- particles driven by a magnetic field
applied to one of the spins. In the parameter space of temperature and
coupling, we show the emergence of two topological Uhlmann phase transitions
when the magnetic field evolves around the equator, where a winding number can
characterize each temperature range. For small couplings, the width of the
temperature gap of the non-trivial phase is roughly the critical temperature
of one-dimensional fermion systems with two-band Hamiltonians. The first
phase transition in the low-temperature regime and small values of the coupling
corresponds to the peak of the \textit{Schottky anomaly} of the heat capacity,
typical of a two-level system in solid-state physics involving the ground and
first excited states. The second phase transition occurs at temperatures very
close to the second maximum of the heat capacity associated with a multilevel
system. We also derive analytical expressions for the thermal Uhlmann phase for
both subsystems, showing that they exhibit phase transitions. In the driven
subsystem, for minimal , a topological phase transition phase appears at
again. However, for larger values of , the transitions occur at lower
temperature values, and they disappear when the coupling reaches a critical
value . The latter is not the case for the undriven subsystem, where at
low temperatures, a single phase transition occurs at . Nevertheless, as
the temperature rises, we demonstrate the emergence of two phase transitions
defining a coupling gap, where the phase is non-trivial and vanishes as the
temperature reaches a critical value.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Quasienergy spectrum and tunneling current in ac-driven triple quantum dot shuttles
The dynamics of electrons in ac driven double quantum dots have been
extensively analyzed by means of Floquet theory. In these systems, coherent
destruction of tunneling has been shown to occur for certain ac field
parameters. In the present work we analyze, by means of Floquet theory, the
electron dynamics of a triple quantum dot in series attached to electric
contacts, where the central dot position oscillates. In particular, we analyze
the quasienergy spectrum of this ac driven nanoelectromechanical system, as a
function of the intensity and frequency of the ac field and of external dc
voltages. For strong driving fields, we derive, by means of perturbation
theory, analytical expressions for the quasienergies of the driven oscillator
system. From this analysis we discuss the conditions for coherent destruction
of tunneling (CDT) to occur as a function of detuning and field parameters. For
zero detuning, and from the invariance of the Floquet Hamiltonian under a
generalized parity transformation, we find analytical expressions describing
the symmetry properties of the Fourier components of the Floquet states under
such transformation. By using these expressions, we show that in the vicinity
of the CDT condition, the quasienergy spectrum exhibits exact crossings which
can be characterized by the parity properties of the corresponding
eigenvectors
Eficacia de finasterida en el tratamiento de la hematuria asociada a la hiperplasia protática benigna
La hematuria es una complicación de la hiperplasia benigna de próstata (HBP), tanto en su evolución natural como durante el seguimiento post cirugía prostática. En el estudio de Mebust et al., de 3000 pacientes sometidos a prostactectomía por Hiperplasia prostática benigna (HBP), en el 12 % la presencia de hematuria fue la causa de esta indicación quirúrgica (1). Existen escasas referencias de la acción de la finasterida ante dicho síntoma (2-7), aunque los resultados publicados hasta el momento demuestran un efecto terapéutico precoz y estable mientras dura el tratamient
Tunneling dynamics in relativistic and nonrelativistic wave equations
We obtain the solution of a relativistic wave equation and compare it with
the solution of the Schroedinger equation for a source with a sharp onset and
excitation frequencies below cut-off. A scaling of position and time reduces to
a single case all the (below cut-off) nonrelativistic solutions, but no such
simplification holds for the relativistic equation, so that qualitatively
different ``shallow'' and ``deep'' tunneling regimes may be identified
relativistically. The nonrelativistic forerunner at a position beyond the
penetration length of the asymptotic stationary wave does not tunnel;
nevertheless, it arrives at the traversal (semiclassical or
B\"uttiker-Landauer) time "tau". The corresponding relativistic forerunner is
more complex: it oscillates due to the interference between two saddle point
contributions, and may be characterized by two times for the arrival of the
maxima of lower and upper envelops. There is in addition an earlier
relativistic forerunner, right after the causal front, which does tunnel.
Within the penetration length, tunneling is more robust for the precursors of
the relativistic equation
Small Renal Masses: Incidental Diagnosis, Clinical Symptoms, and Prognostic Factors
Introduction. The small renal masses (SRMs) have increased over the past two decades due to more liberal use of imaging techniques. SRMs have allowed discussions regarding their prognostic, diagnosis, and therapeutic approach. Materials and methods. Clinical presentation, incidental diagnosis, and prognosis factors of SRMs are discussed in this review. Results. SRMs are defined as lesions less than 4 cm in diameter. SRM could be benign, and most malignant SMRs are low stage and low grade. Clinical symptoms like hematuria are very rare, being diagnosed by chance (incidental) in most cases. Size, stage, and grade are still the most consistent prognosis factors in (RCC). An enhanced contrast SRM that grows during active surveillance is clearly malignant, and its aggressive potential increases in those greater than 3 cm. Clear cell carcinoma is the most frequent cellular type of malign SRM. Conclusions. Only some SRMs are benign. The great majority of malign SRMs have good prognosis (low stage and grade, no metastasis) with open or laparoscopic surgical treatment (nephron sparing techniques). Active surveillance is an accepted attitude in selected cases
- …