1,076 research outputs found

    Anisotropy on the Fermi Surface of the Two-Dimensional Hubbard Model

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    We investigate anisotropic charge fluctuations in the two-dimensional Hubbard model at half filling. By the quantum Monte Carlo method, we calculate a momentum-resolved charge compressibility κ(k)=d<n(k)>/dμ\kappa (\bm{k}) = {d < n(\bm{k}) >}/{d \mu}, which shows effects of an infinitesimal doping. At the temperature T∼t2/UT \sim {t^2}/{U}, κ(k)\kappa (\bm{k}) shows peak structure at the (±π/2,±π/2)(\pm \pi/2,\pm \pi/2) points along the ∣kx∣+∣ky∣=π|k_x| + |k_y| = \pi line. A similar peak structure is reproduced in the mean-filed calculation for the d-wave pairing state or the staggered flux state.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, figures and presentation are modifie

    Quantum Monte Carlo study of a nonmagnetic impurity in the two-dimensional Hubbard model

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    In order to investigate the effects of nonmagnetic impurities in strongly correlated systems, Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations have been carried out for the doped two-dimensional Hubbard model with one nonmagnetic impurity. Using a bare impurity potential which is onsite and attractive, magnetic and single-particle properties have been calculated. The QMC results show that giant oscillations develop in the Knight shift response around the impurity site due to the short-range antiferromagnetic correlations. These results are useful for interpreting the NMR data on Li and Zn substituted layered cuprates.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure

    Theory of spin and charge fluctuations in the Hubbard model

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    A self-consistent theory of both spin and charge fluctuations in the Hubbard model is presented. It is in quantitative agreement with Monte Carlo data at least up to intermediate coupling (U∼8t)(U\sim 8t). It includes both short-wavelength quantum renormalization effects, and long-wavelength thermal fluctuations which can destroy long-range order in two dimensions. This last effect leads to a small energy scale, as often observed in high temperature superconductors. The theory is conserving, satisfies the Pauli principle and includes three-particle correlations necessary to account for the incipient Mott transition.Comment: J1K 2R1 10 pages, Revtex 3.0, 4 uuencoded postscript figures, report# CRPS-93-4

    Competition between spin exchange and correlated hopping

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    The ground-state phase diagram is numerically studied for an electronic model consisting of the spin exchange term (J) and the correlated hopping term (t_3: the three-site term). This model has no single-particle hopping and the ratio of the two terms is controlled by a parameter \alpha \equiv 4 t_3 / J. The case of \alpha=1 corresponds to complete suppression of single-particle hopping in the strong-coupling limit of the Hubbard model. In one dimension, phase separation takes place below a critical value \alpha_c = 0.36-0.63 which depends on the electron density. Spin gap opens in the whole region except the phase-separated one. For \alpha \gsim 1.2 and low hole densities, charge-density-wave correlations are the most dominant, whereas singlet-pairing correlations are the most dominant in the remaining region. The possibility of superconductivity in the two-dimensional case is also discussed, based on equal-time pairing correlations.Comment: 4 pages including 5 figures. Proceedings of ISSP-Kashiwa 2001 (submitted to J. Phys. Chem. Solids

    A Proposal for Robpca Algorithm

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    Principal component Analysis (PCA) is one of the most frequently used multivariate statistical methods. Especially, it is used on the purpose of dimension reduction and obtaining uncorrelated variables. However, classic PCA (CPCA) is sensitive to outlier. Because it is based on classic covariance or correlation matrices influenced by outliers

    Understanding the Potential In Vitro Modes of Action of Bis(beta-diketonato) Oxovanadium(IV) Complexes

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    To understand the potential in vitro modes of action of bis(β-diketonato) oxovanadium(IV) complexes, nine compounds of varying functionality have been screened using a range of biological techniques. The antiproliferative activity against a range of cancerous and normal cell lines has been determined, and show these complexes are particularly sensitive against the lung carcinoma cell line, A549. Annexin V (apoptosis) and Caspase-3/7 assays were studied to confirm these complexes induce programmed cell death. While gel electrophoresis was used to determine DNA cleavage activity and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), the Comet assay was used to determine induced genomic DNA damage. Additionally, Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based DNA melting and fluorescent intercalation displacement assays have been used to determine the interaction of the complexes with double strand (DS) DNA and to establish preferential DNA base-pair binding (AT versus GC)

    Quasi-particle Lifetimes in a d_{x^2-y^2} Superconductor

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    We consider the lifetime of quasi-particles in a d-wave superconductor due to scattering from antiferromagnetic spin-fluctuations, and explicitly separate the contribution from Umklapp processes which determines the electrical conductivity. Results for the temperature dependence of the total scattering rate and the Umklapp scattering rate are compared with relaxation rates obtained from thermal and microwave conductivity measurements, respectively.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Quasiparticle Dispersion of the 2D Hubbard Model: From an Insulator to a Metal

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    On the basis of Quantum-Monte-Carlo results the evolution of the spectral weight A(k⃗,ω)A(\vec k, \omega) of the two-dimensional Hubbard model is studied from insulating to metallic behavior. As observed in recent photoemission experiments for cuprates, the electronic excitations display essentially doping-independent features: a quasiparticle-like dispersive narrow band of width of the order of the exchange interaction JJ and a broad valence- and conduction-band background. The continuous evolution is traced back to one and the same many-body origin: the doping-dependent antiferromagnetic spin-spin correlation.Comment: 11 pages, REVtex, 4 figures (in uuencoded postscript format

    Kink Structure in the Quasiparticle Band of Doped Hubbard Systems

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    By making use of the self-consistent projection operator method with high-momentum and high-energy resolutions, we find a kink structure in the quasiparticle excitation spectrum of the two-dimensional Hubbard model in the underdoped regime. The kink is caused by a mixing between the quasiparticle state and excitations with short-range antiferromagnetic order. We suggest that this might be the origin of the strong concentration dependence of the 'kink' found in La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} (x=0.03-0.07).Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures. to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., Vol. 74, No. 9, September 15, 200

    Non-magnetic impurities in two- and three- dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets

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    In this paper we study in a large-S expansion effects of substituting spins by non-magnetic impurities in two- and three- dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets in a weak magnetic field. In particular, we demonstrate a novel mechanism where magnetic moments are induced around non-magnetic impurities when magnetic field is present. As a result, Curie-type behaviour in magnetic susceptibility can be observed well below the Neel temperature, in agreement with what is being observed in La2Cu1−xZnxO4La_2Cu_{1-x}Zn_{x}O_4 and Sr(Cu1−xZnx)2O3Sr(Cu_{1-x}Zn_x)_2O_3 compounds.Comment: Latex fil
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