167 research outputs found
Thomas-Fermi-Dirac-von Weizsacker hydrodynamics in laterally modulated electronic systems
We have studied the collective plasma excitations of a two-dimensional
electron gas with an arbitrary lateral charge-density modulation. The dynamics
is formulated using a previously developed hydrodynamic theory based on the
Thomas-Fermi-Dirac-von Weizsacker approximation. In this approach, both the
equilibrium and dynamical properties of the periodically modulated electron gas
are treated in a consistent fashion. We pay particular attention to the
evolution of the collective excitations as the system undergoes the transition
from the ideal two-dimensional limit to the highly-localized one-dimensional
limit. We also calculate the power absorption in the long-wavelength limit to
illustrate the effect of the modulation on the modes probed by far-infrared
(FIR) transmission spectroscopy.Comment: 27 page Revtex file, 15 Postscript figure
Proposal for an Experiment to Test a Theory of High Temperature Superconductors
A theory for the phenomena observed in Copper-Oxide based high temperature
superconducting materials derives an elusive time-reversal and rotational
symmetry breaking order parameter for the observed pseudogap phase ending at a
quantum-critical point near the composition for the highest . An
experiment is proposed to observe such a symmetry breaking. It is shown that
Angle-resolved Photoemission yields a current density which is different for
left and right circularly polarized photons. The magnitude of the effect and
its momentum dependence is estimated. Barring the presence of domains of the
predicted phase an asymmetry of about 0.1 is predicted at low temperatures in
moderately underdoped samples.Comment: latex, 2 figure
Photoemission Beyond the Sudden Approximation
The many-body theory of photoemission in solids is reviewed with emphasis on
methods based on response theory. The classification of diagrams into loss and
no-loss diagrams is discussed and related to Keldysh path-ordering
book-keeping. Some new results on energy losses in valence-electron
photoemission from free-electron-like metal surfaces are presented. A way to
group diagrams is presented in which spectral intensities acquire a
Golden-Rule-like form which guarantees positiveness. This way of regrouping
should be useful also in other problems involving spectral intensities, such as
the problem of improving the one-electron spectral function away from the
quasiparticle peak.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
Theory of friction: contribution from fluctuating electromagnetic field
We calculate the friction force between two semi-infinite solids in relative
parallel motion (velocity ), and separated by a vacuum gap of width . The
friction force result from coupling via a fluctuating electromagnetic field,
and can be considered as the dissipative part of the van der Waals interaction.
We consider the dependence of the friction force on the temperature , and
present a detailed discussion of the limiting cases of small and large and
.Comment: 15 pages, No figure
Collisionless hydrodynamics for 1D motion of inhomogeneous degenerate electron gases: equivalence of two recent descriptions
Recently I. Tokatly and O. Pankratov (''TP'', Phys. Rev. B 60, 15550 (1999))
used velocity moments of a semiclassical kinetic equation to derive a
hydrodynamic description of electron motion in a degenerate electron gas.
Independently, the present authors (Theochem 501-502, 327 (2000)) used
considerations arising from the Harmonic Potential Theorem (Phys. Rev. Lett.
73, 2244 (1994)) to generate a new form of high-frequency hydrodynamics for
inhomogeneous degenerate electron gases (HPT-N3 hydrodynamics). We show here
that TP hydrodynamics yields HPT-N3 hydrodynamics when linearized about a
Thomas-Fermi groundstate with one-dimensional spatial inhomnogeneity.Comment: 17p
The transition from the adiabatic to the sudden limit in core level photoemission: A model study of a localized system
We consider core electron photoemission in a localized system, where there is
a charge transfer excitation. The system is modelled by three electron levels,
one core level and two outer levels. The model has a Coulomb interaction
between these levels and the continuum states into which the core electron is
emitted. The model is simple enough to allow an exact numerical solution, and
with a separable potential an analytic solution. We calculate the ratio
r(omega) between the weights of the satellite and the main peak as a function
of the photon energy omega. The transition from the adiabatic to the sudden
limit takes place for quite small photoelectron kinetic energies. For such
small energies, the variation of the dipole matrix element is substantial and
described by the energy scale Ed. Without the coupling to the photoelectron,
the corresponding ratio r0(omega) is determined by Ed and the satellite
excitation energy dE. When the interaction potential with the continuum states
is introduced, a new energy scale Es=1/(2Rs^2) enters, where Rs is a length
scale of the interaction potential. At threshold there is typically a (weak)
constructive interference between intrinsic and extrinsic contributions, and
the ratio r(omega)/r0(omega) is larger than its limiting value for large omega.
The interference becomes small or weakly destructive for photoelectron energies
of the order Es. For larger energies r(omega)/r0(omega) therefore typically has
a weak undershoot. If this undershoot is neglected, r(omega)/r0(omega) reaches
its limiting value on the energy scale Es.Comment: 18 pages, latex2e, 13 eps figure
Spontaneous Interlayer Coherence in Double-Layer Quantum Hall Systems: Symmetry Breaking Interactions, In-Plane Fields and Phase Solitons
At strong magnetic fields double-layer two-dimensional-electron-gas systems
can form an unusual broken symmetry state with spontaneous inter-layer phase
coherence. The system can be mapped to an equivalent system of pseudospin
particles with pseudospin-dependent interactions and easy-plane magnetic order.
In this paper we discuss how the presence of a weak interlayer tunneling term
alters the properties of double-layer systems when the broken symmetry is
present. We use the energy functional and equations of motion derived earlier
to evaluate the zero-temperature response functions of the double-layer system
and use our results to discuss analogies between this system and
Josephson-coupled superconducting films. We also present a qualitative picture
of the low-energy charged excitations of this system. We show that parallel
fields induce a highly collective phase transition to an incommensurate state
with broken translational symmetry.Comment: 26 pages, RevTex, 8 postscript figures (submitted to Phys. Rev. B
ARPES: A probe of electronic correlations
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is one of the most direct
methods of studying the electronic structure of solids. By measuring the
kinetic energy and angular distribution of the electrons photoemitted from a
sample illuminated with sufficiently high-energy radiation, one can gain
information on both the energy and momentum of the electrons propagating inside
a material. This is of vital importance in elucidating the connection between
electronic, magnetic, and chemical structure of solids, in particular for those
complex systems which cannot be appropriately described within the
independent-particle picture. Among the various classes of complex systems, of
great interest are the transition metal oxides, which have been at the center
stage in condensed matter physics for the last four decades. Following a
general introduction to the topic, we will lay the theoretical basis needed to
understand the pivotal role of ARPES in the study of such systems. After a
brief overview on the state-of-the-art capabilities of the technique, we will
review some of the most interesting and relevant case studies of the novel
physics revealed by ARPES in 3d-, 4d- and 5d-based oxides.Comment: Chapter to appear in "Strongly Correlated Systems: Experimental
Techniques", edited by A. Avella and F. Mancini, Springer Series in
Solid-State Sciences (2013). A high-resolution version can be found at:
http://www.phas.ubc.ca/~quantmat/ARPES/PUBLICATIONS/Reviews/ARPES_Springer.pdf.
arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:cond-mat/0307085,
arXiv:cond-mat/020850
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