79,665 research outputs found
Competition Between Stripes and Pairing in a t-t'-J Model
As the number of legs n of an n-leg, t-J ladder increases, density matrix
renormalization group calculations have shown that the doped state tends to be
characterized by a static array of domain walls and that pairing correlations
are suppressed. Here we present results for a t-t'-J model in which a diagonal,
single particle, next-near-neighbor hopping t' is introduced. We find that this
can suppress the formation of stripes and, for t' positive, enhance the
d_{x^2-y^2}-like pairing correlations. The effect of t' > 0 is to cause the
stripes to evaporate into pairs and for t' < 0 to evaporate into
quasi-particles. Results for n=4 and 6-leg ladders are discussed.Comment: Four pages, four encapsulated figure
A Two-dimensional Infinte System Density Matrix Renormalization Group Algorithm
It has proved difficult to extend the density matrix renormalization group
technique to large two-dimensional systems. In this Communication I present a
novel approach where the calculation is done directly in two dimensions. This
makes it possible to use an infinite system method, and for the first time the
fixed point in two dimensions is studied. By analyzing several related blocking
schemes I find that there exists an algorithm for which the local energy
decreases monotonically as the system size increases, thereby showing the
potential feasibility of this method.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Effect of the W-term for a t-U-W Hubbard ladder
Antiferromagnetic and d_{x2-y2}-pairing correlations appear delicately
balanced in the 2D Hubbard model. Whether doping can tip the balance to pairing
is unclear and models with additional interaction terms have been studied. In
one of these, the square of a local hopping kinetic energy H_W was found to
favor pairing. However, such a term can be separated into a number of simpler
processes and one would like to know which of these terms are responsible for
enhancing the pairing. Here we analyze these processes for a 2-leg Hubbard
ladder
Hole-pair hopping in arrangements of hole-rich/hole-poor domains in a quantum antiferromagnet
We study the motion of holes in a doped quantum antiferromagnet in the
presence of arrangements of hole-rich and hole-poor domains such as the
stripe-phase in high- cuprates. When these structures form, it becomes
energetically favorable for single holes, pairs of holes or small bound-hole
clusters to hop from one hole-rich domain to another due to quantum
fluctuations. However, we find that at temperature of approximately 100 K, the
probability for bound hole-pair exchange between neighboring hole-rich regions
in the stripe phase, is one or two orders of magnitude larger than single-hole
or multi-hole droplet exchange. As a result holes in a given hole-rich domain
penetrate further into the antiferromagnetically aligned domains when they do
it in pairs. At temperature of about 100 K and below bound pairs of holes hop
from one hole-rich domain to another with high probability. Therefore our main
finding is that the presence of the antiferromagnetic hole-poor domains act as
a filter which selects, from the hole-rich domains (where holes form a
self-bound liquid), hole pairs which can be exchanged throughout the system.
This fluid of bound hole pairs can undergo a superfluid phase ordering at the
above mentioned temperature scale.Comment: Revtex, 6 two-column pages, 4 figure
The critical behaviour of the 2D Ising model in Transverse Field; a Density Matrix Renormalization calculation
We have adjusted the Density Matrix Renormalization method to handle two
dimensional systems of limited width. The key ingredient for this extension is
the incorporation of symmetries in the method. The advantage of our approach is
that we can force certain symmetry properties to the resulting ground state
wave function. Combining the results obtained for system sizes up-to and finite size scaling, we derive the phase transition point and the
critical exponent for the gap in the Ising model in a Transverse Field on a two
dimensional square lattice.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Thermodynamics of the anisotropic Heisenberg chain calculated by the density matrix renormalization group method
The density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) method is applied to the
anisotropic Heisenberg chain at finite temperatures. The free energy of the
system is obtained using the quantum transfer matrix which is iteratively
enlarged in the imaginary time direction. The magnetic susceptibility and the
specific heat are calculated down to T=0.01J and compared with the Bethe ansatz
results. The agreement including the logarithmic correction in the magnetic
susceptibility at the isotropic point is fairly good.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures, REVTeX, to appear in J. Phys. Soc.
Jpn. Vol.66 No.8 (1997
Deconvolution of ASCA X-ray data: II. Radial temperature and metallicity profiles for 106 galaxy clusters
In Paper-I we presented a methodology to recover the spatial variations of
properties of the intracluster gas from ASCA X-ray satellite observations of
galaxy clusters. We verified the correctness of this procedure by applying it
to simulated cluster datasets which we had subjected to the various
contaminants common in ASCA data. In this paper we present the results which we
obtain when we apply this method to real galaxy cluster observations. We
determine broad-band temperature and cooling-flow mass-deposition rates for the
106 clusters in our sample, and obtain temperature, abundance and emissivity
profiles (i.e. at least two annular bins) for 98 of these clusters. We find
that 90 percent of these temperature profiles are consistent with isothermality
at the 3-sigma confidence level. This conflicts with the prevalence of
steeply-declining cluster temperature profiles found by Markevitch et al.
(1998) from a sample of 30 clusters. In Paper-III (in preparation) we utilise
our temperature and emissivity profiles to determine radial hydrostatic-mass
properties for a subsample of the clusters presented in this paper.Comment: MNRAS, accpeted. Postscript copy of paper and individual postscript
files for plots in Appendix B can be obtained from:
http://www-xray.ast.cam.ac.uk/~da
Numerical renormalization group study of the correlation functions of the antiferromagnetic spin- Heisenberg chain
We use the density-matrix renormalization group technique developed by White
\cite{white} to calculate the spin correlation functions
for isotropic Heisenberg rings up to
sites. The correlation functions for large and are found to obey
the scaling relation
proposed by Kaplan et al. \cite{horsch} , which is used to determine
. The asymptotic correlation function and
the magnetic structure factor show logarithmic corrections
consistent with , where is related
to the cut-off dependent coupling constant , as
predicted by field theoretical treatments.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev. B. 4 pages of text in Latex + 5 figures in
uuencoded form containing the 5 postscripts (mailed separately
First principle computation of stripes in cuprates
We present a first principle computation of vertical stripes in
within the LDA+U method. We find that Cu centered
stripes are unstable toward O centered stripes. The metallic core of the stripe
is quite wide and shows reduced magnetic moments with suppressed
antiferromagnetic (AF) interactions. The system can be pictured as alternating
metallic and AF two-leg ladders the latter with strong AF interaction and a
large spin gap. The Fermi surface shows warping due to interstripe
hybridization. The periodicity and amplitude of the warping is in good
agreement with angle resolved photoemission experiment. We discuss the
connection with low-energy theories of the cuprates.Comment: 5 pages,4 figure
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