600 research outputs found
In an Ising model with spin-exchange dynamics damage always spreads
We investigate the spreading of damage in Ising models with Kawasaki
spin-exchange dynamics which conserves the magnetization. We first modify a
recent master equation approach to account for dynamic rules involving more
than a single site. We then derive an effective-field theory for damage
spreading in Ising models with Kawasaki spin-exchange dynamics and solve it for
a two-dimensional model on a honeycomb lattice. In contrast to the cases of
Glauber or heat-bath dynamics, we find that the damage always spreads and never
heals. In the long-time limit the average Hamming distance approaches that of
two uncorrelated systems. These results are verified by Monte-Carlo
simulations.Comment: 5 pages REVTeX, 4 EPS figures, final version as publishe
Protecting clean critical points by local disorder correlations
We show that a broad class of quantum critical points can be stable against
locally correlated disorder even if they are unstable against uncorrelated
disorder. Although this result seemingly contradicts the Harris criterion, it
follows naturally from the absence of a random-mass term in the associated
order-parameter field theory. We illustrate the general concept with explicit
calculations for quantum spin-chain models. Instead of the infinite-randomness
physics induced by uncorrelated disorder, we find that weak locally correlated
disorder is irrelevant. For larger disorder, we find a line of critical points
with unusual properties such as an increase of the entanglement entropy with
the disorder strength. We also propose experimental realizations in the context
of quantum magnetism and cold-atom physics.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; published versio
The quantum phase transition of itinerant helimagnets
We investigate the quantum phase transition of itinerant electrons from a
paramagnet to a state which displays long-period helical structures due to a
Dzyaloshinskii instability of the ferromagnetic state. In particular, we study
how the self-generated effective long-range interaction recently identified in
itinerant quantum ferromagnets is cut-off by the helical ordering. We find that
for a sufficiently strong Dzyaloshinskii instability the helimagnetic quantum
phase transition is of second order with mean-field exponents. In contrast, for
a weak Dzyaloshinskii instability the transition is analogous to that in
itinerant quantum ferromagnets, i.e. it is of first order, as has been observed
in MnSi.Comment: 5 pages RevTe
Critical points and non-Fermi liquids in the underscreened pseudogap Kondo model
Numerical Renormalization Group simulations have shown that the underscreened
spin-1 Kondo impurity model with power-law bath density of states (DOS)
\rho(\w) \propto |\w|^r possesses various intermediate-coupling fixed points,
including a stable non-Fermi liquid phase. In this paper we discuss the
corresponding universal low-energy theories, obtain thermodynamic quantities
and critical exponents by renormalization group analysis together with suitable
-expansions, and compare our results with numerical data. Whereas the
particle-hole symmetric critical point can be controlled at weak coupling using
a simple generalization of the spin-1/2 model, we show that the stable
non-Fermi liquid fixed point must be accessed near strong coupling via a
mapping onto an effective ferromagnetic S_\mr{eff}=1/2 model with singular
bath DOS with exponent r_\mr{eff}=-r<0. In addition, we consider the
particle-hole asymmetric critical fixed point, for which we propose a universal
field theory involving the crossing between doublet and triplet levels.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Minor modifications in updated versio
Damage spreading and dynamic stability of kinetic Ising models
We investigate how the time evolution of different kinetic Ising models
depends on the initial conditions of the dynamics. To this end we consider the
simultaneous evolution of two identical systems subjected to the same thermal
noise. We derive a master equation for the time evolution of a joint
probability distribution of the two systems. This equation is then solved
within an effective-field approach. By analyzing the fixed points of the master
equation and their stability we identify regular and chaotic phases.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 Postscript figure
Heavy-fermion metals with hybridization nodes: Unconventional Fermi liquids and competing phases
Microscopic models for heavy-fermion materials often assume a local, i.e.,
momentum-independent, hybridization between the conduction band and the
local-moment f electrons. Motivated by recent experiments, we consider
situations where this neglect of momentum dependence is inappropriate, namely
when the hybridization function has nodes in momentum space. We explore the
thermodynamic and optical properties of the highly anisotropic heavy Fermi
liquid, resulting from Kondo screening in a higher angular-momentum channel.
The dichotomy in momentum space has interesting consequences: While e.g. the
low-temperature specific heat is dominated by heavy quasiparticles, the
electrical conductivity at intermediate temperatures is carried by unhybridized
light electrons. We then discuss aspects of the competition between Kondo
effect and ordering phenomena induced by inter-moment exchange: We propose that
the strong momentum-space anisotropy plays a vital role in selecting competing
phases. Explicit results are obtained for the interplay of unconventional
hybridization with unconventional, magnetically mediated, superconductivity,
utilizing variants of large-N mean-field theory. We make connections to recent
experiments on CeCoIn5 and other heavy-fermion materials.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figs, (v2) remark on Wiedemann-Franz added, small
changes, final version as publishe
Differences between regular and random order of updates in damage spreading simulations
We investigate the spreading of damage in the three-dimensional Ising model
by means of large-scale Monte-Carlo simulations. Within the Glauber dynamics we
use different rules for the order in which the sites are updated. We find that
the stationary damage values and the spreading temperature are different for
different update order. In particular, random update order leads to larger
damage and a lower spreading temperature than regular order. Consequently,
damage spreading in the Ising model is non-universal not only with respect to
different update algorithms (e.g. Glauber vs. heat-bath dynamics) as already
known, but even with respect to the order of sites.Comment: final version as published, 4 pages REVTeX, 2 eps figures include
Spontaneous interlayer coherence in bilayer Kondo systems
Bilayer Kondo systems present interesting models to illustrate the
competition between the Kondo effect and intermoment exchange. Such bilayers
can exhibit two sharply distinct Fermi liquid phases which are distinguished by
whether or not the local moments participate in the Fermi sea. We study these
phases and the evolution from one to the other upon changing Kondo coupling. We
argue that an ordered state with spontaneous interlayer phase coherence
generically intervenes between the two Fermi liquids. Such a condensate phase
breaks a U(1) symmetry and is bounded by a finite-temperature
Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. Based on general arguments and mean-field
calculations we investigate the phase diagram and associated quantum phase
transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs, (v2) misprints in eqs corrected, final version as
publishe
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