201 research outputs found
Orthogonality constraints and entropy in the SO(5)-Theory of HighT_c-Superconductivity
S.C. Zhang has put forward the idea that high-temperature-superconductors can
be described in the framework of an SO(5)-symmetric theory in which the three
components of the antiferromagnetic order-parameter and the two components of
the two-particle condensate form a five-component order-parameter with SO(5)
symmetry. Interactions small in comparison to this strong interaction introduce
anisotropies into the SO(5)-space and determine whether it is favorable for the
system to be superconducting or antiferromagnetic. Here the view is expressed
that Zhang's derivation of the effective interaction V_{eff} based on his
Hamiltonian H_a is not correct. However, the orthogonality constraints
introduced several pages after this 'derivation' give the key to an effective
interaction very similar to that given by Zhang. It is shown that the
orthogonality constraints are not rigorous constraints, but they maximize the
entropy at finite temperature. If the interaction drives the ground-state to
the largest possible eigenvalues of the operators under consideration
(antiferromagnetic ordering, superconducting condensate, etc.), then the
orthogonality constraints are obeyed by the ground-state, too.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Flow Equations and Normal Ordering
In this paper we consider flow-equations where we allow a normal ordering
which is adjusted to the one-particle energy of the Hamiltonian. We show that
this flow converges nearly always to the stable phase. Starting out from the
symmetric Hamiltonian and symmetry-broken normal ordering nearly always yields
symmetry breaking below the critical temperature.Comment: 7 page
Inhomogeneous Fixed Point Ensembles Revisited
The density of states of disordered systems in the Wigner-Dyson classes
approaches some finite non-zero value at the mobility edge, whereas the density
of states in systems of the chiral and Bogolubov-de Gennes classes shows a
divergent or vanishing behavior in the band centre. Such types of behavior were
classified as homogeneous and inhomogeneous fixed point ensembles within a
real-space renormalization group approach. For the latter ensembles the scaling
law was derived for the power laws of the density of states
and of the localization length .
This prediction from 1976 is checked against explicit results obtained
meanwhile.Comment: Submitted to 'World Scientific' for the volume 'Fifty Years of
Anderson Localization'. 12 page
- …