7,849 research outputs found

    Extended Hubbard Model with Unconventional Pairing in Two Dimensions

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    We rigorously prove that an extended Hubbard model with attraction in two dimensions has an unconventional pairing ground state for any electron filling. The anisotropic spin-0 or anisotropic spin-1 pairing symmetry is realized, depending on a phase parameter characterizing the type of local attractive interactions. In both cases the ground state is unique. It is also shown that in a special case, where there are no electron hopping terms, the ground state has Ising-type N\'eel order at half-filling, when on-site repulsion is furthermore added. Physical applications are mentioned.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, v2: title is changed, new results are added, minor change

    Adiabatic connection between the RVB State and the ground state of the half filled periodic Anderson model

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    A one-parameter family of models that interpolates between the periodic Anderson model with infinite repulsion at half-filling and a model whose ground state is exactly the Resonating-Valence-Bond state is studied. It is shown numerically that the excitation gap does not collapse. Therefore the ground states of the two models are adiabatically connected.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures Revte

    Magnetic and superconducting properties on S-type single-crystal CeCu2_2Si2_2 probed by 63^{63}Cu nuclear magnetic resonance and nuclear quadrupole resonance

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    We have performed 63^{63}Cu nuclear magnetic resonance/nuclear quadrupole resonance measurements to investigate the magnetic and superconducting (SC) properties on a "superconductivity dominant" (SS-type) single crystal of CeCu2_2Si2_2. Although the development of antiferromagnetic (AFM) fluctuations down to 1~K indicated that the AFM criticality was close, Korringa behavior was observed below 0.8~K, and no magnetic anomaly was observed above TcT_{\rm c} \sim 0.6 K. These behaviors were expected in SS-type CeCu2_2Si2_2. The temperature dependence of the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T11/T_1 at zero field was almost identical to that in the previous polycrystalline samples down to 130~mK, but the temperature dependence deviated downward below 120~mK. In fact, 1/T11/T_1 in the SC state could be fitted with the two-gap s±s_{\pm}-wave rather than the two-gap s++s_{++}-wave model down to 90~mK. Under magnetic fields, the spin susceptibility in both directions clearly decreased below TcT_{\rm c}, indicative of the formation of spin singlet pairing. The residual part of the spin susceptibility was understood by the field-induced residual density of states evaluated from 1/T1T1/T_1T, which was ascribed to the effect of the vortex cores. No magnetic anomaly was observed above the upper critical field Hc2H_{c2}, but the development of AFM fluctuations was observed, indicating that superconductivity was realized in strong AFM fluctuations.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure

    Mechanical Behavior of Cohesive Soil under Repeated Loading

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    A new triaxial apparatus which can control the stress condition automatically in a constant mean principal stress under repeated loading was developed, Mechanical behavior of cohesive soils under repeated loading was investigated. Excess pore water pressure generated in loading cycles was measured and the experimental results were interpreted in terms of effective stress by using elasto-plastic models

    Glasslike vs. crystalline thermal conductivity in carrier-tuned Ba8Ga16X30 clathrates (X = Ge, Sn)

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    The present controversy over the origin of glasslike thermal conductivity observed in certain crystalline materials is addressed by studies on single-crystal x-ray diffraction, thermal conductivity k(T) and specific heat Cp(T) of carrier-tuned Ba8Ga16X30 (X = Ge, Sn) clathrates. These crystals show radically different low-temperature k(T) behaviors depending on whether their charge carriers are electrons or holes, displaying the usual crystalline peak in the former case and an anomalous glasslike plateau in the latter. In contrast, Cp(T) above 4 K and the general structural properties are essentially insensitive to carrier tuning. We analyze these combined results within the framework of a Tunneling/Resonant/Rayleigh scatterings model, and conclude that the evolution from crystalline to glasslike k(T) is accompanied by an increase both in the effective density of tunnelling states and in the resonant scattering level, while neither one of these contributions can solely account for the observed changes in the full temperature range. This suggests that the most relevant factor which determines crystalline or glasslike behavior is the coupling strength between the guest vibrational modes and the frameworks with different charge carriers.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Possible solution to the 7^7Li problem by the long lived stau

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    Modification of standard big-bang nucleosynthesis is considered in the minimal supersymmetric standard model to resolve the excessive theoretical prediction of the abundance of primordial lithium 7. We focus on the stau as a next-lightest superparticle, which is long lived due to its small mass difference with the lightest superparticle. It provides a number of additional decay processes of 7Li\mathrm{^{7}Li} and 7Be\mathrm{^{7}Be}. A particularly important process is the internal conversion in the stau-nucleus bound state, which destroys the 7Li\mathrm{^{7}Li} and 7Be\mathrm{^{7}Be} effectively. We show that the modification can lead to a prediction consistent with the observed abundance of 7Li\mathrm{^{7}Li}.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Thermal Field Theory in Non-Equilibrium States

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    Conventional transport theory is not really applicable to non-equilibrium systems which exhibit strong quantum effects. We present two different approaches to overcome this problem. Firstly we point out how transport equations may be derived that incorporate a nontrivial spectral function as a typical quantum effect, and test this approach in a toy model of a strongly interacting degenerate plasma. Secondly we explore a path to include non-equilibrium effects into quantum field theory through momentum mixing transformations in Fock space. Although the two approaches are completely orthogonal, they lead to the same coherent conclusion.Comment: 15 pages, latex, 2 figures, also available at ftp://tpri6c.gsi.de/pub/phenning/hny95/ or at http://www.gsi.de/~phenning/tft.html Dedicated to the memory of Hiroomi Umezaw
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