24,810 research outputs found

    Magnetic Excitations of Stripes Near a Quantum Critical Point

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    We calculate the dynamical spin structure factor of spin waves for weakly coupled stripes. At low energy, the spin wave cone intensity is strongly peaked on the inner branches. As energy is increased, there is a saddlepoint followed by a square-shaped continuum rotated 45 degree from the low energy peaks. This is reminiscent of recent high energy neutron scattering data on the cuprates. The similarity at high energy between this semiclassical treatment and quantum fluctuations in spin ladders may be attributed to the proximity of a quantum critical point with a small critical exponent η\eta.Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figures, published versio

    Magnetic Excitations of Stripes and Checkerboards in the Cuprates

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    We discuss the magnetic excitations of well-ordered stripe and checkerboard phases, including the high energy magnetic excitations of recent interest and possible connections to the "resonance peak" in cuprate superconductors. Using a suitably parametrized Heisenberg model and spin wave theory, we study a variety of magnetically ordered configurations, including vertical and diagonal site- and bond-centered stripes and simple checkerboards. We calculate the expected neutron scattering intensities as a function of energy and momentum. At zero frequency, the satellite peaks of even square-wave stripes are suppressed by as much as a factor of 34 below the intensity of the main incommensurate peaks. We further find that at low energy, spin wave cones may not always be resolvable experimentally. Rather, the intensity as a function of position around the cone depends strongly on the coupling across the stripe domain walls. At intermediate energy, we find a saddlepoint at (Ï€,Ï€)(\pi,\pi) for a range of couplings, and discuss its possible connection to the "resonance peak" observed in neutron scattering experiments on cuprate superconductors. At high energy, various structures are possible as a function of coupling strength and configuration, including a high energy square-shaped continuum originally attributed to the quantum excitations of spin ladders. On the other hand, we find that simple checkerboard patterns are inconsistent with experimental results from neutron scattering.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, for high-res figs, see http://physics.bu.edu/~yaodx/spinwave2/spinw2.htm

    In-plane thermal conductivity of large single crystals of Sm-substituted (Y1−x_{1-x}Smx_{x})Ba2_{2}Cu3_{3}O7−δ_{7-\delta}

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    We have investigated the in-plane thermal conductivity κab(T,H)\kappa_{ab}(T,H) of large single crystals of optimally oxygen-doped (Y1−x_{1-x},Smx_{x})Ba2_{2}Cu3_{3}O7−δ_{7-\delta} (xx=0, 0.1, 0.2 and 1.0) and YBa2_{2}(Cu1−y_{1-y}Zny_{y})3_{3}O7−δ_{7-\delta}(yy=0.0071) as functions of temperature and magnetic field (along the c axis). For comparison, the temperature dependence of κab\kappa_{ab} for as-grown crystals with the corresponding compositions are presented. The nonlinear field dependence of κab\kappa_{ab} for all crystals was observed at relatively low fields near a half of TcT_{c}. We make fits of the κ(H)\kappa(H) data to an electron contribution model, providing both the mean free path of quasiparticles ℓ0\ell_{0} and the electronic thermal conductivity κe\kappa_{e}, in the absence of field. The local lattice distortion due to the Sm substitution for Y suppresses both the phonon and electron contributions. On the other hand, the light Zn doping into the CuO 2_{2} planes affects solely the electron component below TcT_{c}, resulting in a substantial decrease in ℓ0\ell_{0} .Comment: 7 pages,4 figures,1 tabl

    Reply to Comment on "Quantum phase transition in the four-spin exchange antiferromagnet"

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    We argue that our analysis of the J-Q model, presented in Phys. Rev. B 80, 174403 (2009), and based on a field-theory description of coupled dimers, captures properly the strong quantum fluctuations tendencies, and the objections outlined by L. Isaev, G. Ortiz, and J. Dukelsky, arXiv:1003.5205, are misplaced

    A comparative study of the electronic and magnetic properties of BaFe_2As_2 and BaMn_2As_2 using the Gutzwiller approximation

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    To elucidate the role played by the transition metal ion in the pnictide materials, we compare the electronic and magnetic properties of BaFe_{2}As_{2} with BaMn_{2}As_{2}. To this end we employ the LDA+Gutzwiller method to analyze the mass renormalizations and the size of the ordered magnetic moment of the two systems. We study a model that contains all five transition metal 3d orbitals together with the Ba-5d and As-4p states (ddp-model) and compare these results with a downfolded model that consists of Fe/Mn d-states only (d-model). Electronic correlations are treated using the multiband Gutzwiller approximation. The paramagnetic phase has also been investigated using LDA+Gutzwiller method with electron density self-consistency. The renormalization factors for the correlated Mn 3d orbitals in the paramagnetic phase of BaMn_{2}As_{2} are shown to be generally smaller than those of BaFe_{2}As_{2}, which indicates that BaMn_{2}As_{2} has stronger electron correlation effect than BaFe_{2}As_{2}. The screening effect of the main As 4p electrons to the correlated Fe/Mn 3d electrons is evident by the systematic shift of the results to larger Hund's rule coupling J side from the ddp-model compared with those from the d-model. A gradual transition from paramagnetic state to the antiferromagnetic ground state with increasing J is obtained for the models of BaFe_{2}As_{2} which has a small experimental magnetic moment; while a rather sharp jump occurs for the models of BaMn_{2}As_{2}, which has a large experimental magnetic moment. The key difference between the two systems is shown to be the d-level occupation. BaMn_{2}As_{2}, with approximately five d-electrons per Mn atom, is for same values of the electron correlations closer to the transition to a Mott insulating state than BaFe_{2}As_{2}. Here an orbitally selective transition, required for a system with close to six electrons only occurs at significantly larger values for the Coulomb interactions

    Dynamic Multiobjectives Optimization with a Changing Number of Objectives

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IEEE via the DOI in this record.Existing studies on dynamic multiobjective optimization (DMO) focus on problems with time-dependent objective functions, while the ones with a changing number of objectives have rarely been considered in the literature. Instead of changing the shape or position of the Pareto-optimal front/set (PF/PS) when having time-dependent objective functions, increasing or decreasing the number of objectives usually leads to the expansion or contraction of the dimension of the PF/PS manifold. Unfortunately, most existing dynamic handling techniques can hardly be adapted to this type of dynamics. In this paper, we report our attempt toward tackling the DMO problems with a changing number of objectives. We implement a dynamic two-archive evolutionary algorithm which maintains two co-evolving populations simultaneously. In particular, these two populations are complementary to each other: one concerns more about the convergence while the other concerns more about the diversity. The compositions of these two populations are adaptively reconstructed once the environment changes. In addition, these two populations interact with each other via a mating selection mechanism. Comprehensive experiments are conducted on various benchmark problems with a time-dependent number of objectives. Empirical results fully demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed algorithm.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)NSF

    Triaxially deformed relativistic point-coupling model for Λ\Lambda hypernuclei: a quantitative analysis of hyperon impurity effect on nuclear collective properties

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    The impurity effect of hyperon on atomic nuclei has received a renewed interest in nuclear physics since the first experimental observation of appreciable reduction of E2E2 transition strength in low-lying states of hypernucleus Λ7^{7}_\LambdaLi. Many more data on low-lying states of Λ\Lambda hypernuclei will be measured soon for sdsd-shell nuclei, providing good opportunities to study the Λ\Lambda impurity effect on nuclear low-energy excitations. We carry out a quantitative analysis of Λ\Lambda hyperon impurity effect on the low-lying states of sdsd-shell nuclei at the beyond-mean-field level based on a relativistic point-coupling energy density functional (EDF), considering that the Λ\Lambda hyperon is injected into the lowest positive-parity (Λs\Lambda_s) and negative-parity (Λp\Lambda_p) states. We adopt a triaxially deformed relativistic mean-field (RMF) approach for hypernuclei and calculate the Λ\Lambda binding energies of hypernuclei as well as the potential energy surfaces (PESs) in (β,γ)(\beta, \gamma) deformation plane. We also calculate the PESs for the Λ\Lambda hypernuclei with good quantum numbers using a microscopic particle rotor model (PRM) with the same relativistic EDF. The triaxially deformed RMF approach is further applied in order to determine the parameters of a five-dimensional collective Hamiltonian (5DCH) for the collective excitations of triaxially deformed core nuclei. Taking Λ25,27^{25,27}_{\Lambda}Mg and Λ31^{31}_{\Lambda}Si as examples, we analyse the impurity effects of Λs\Lambda_s and Λp\Lambda_p on the low-lying states of the core nuclei...Comment: 15 pages with 18 figures and 1 table (version to be published in Physical Review C

    The Flexible Group Spatial Keyword Query

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    We present a new class of service for location based social networks, called the Flexible Group Spatial Keyword Query, which enables a group of users to collectively find a point of interest (POI) that optimizes an aggregate cost function combining both spatial distances and keyword similarities. In addition, our query service allows users to consider the tradeoffs between obtaining a sub-optimal solution for the entire group and obtaining an optimimized solution but only for a subgroup. We propose algorithms to process three variants of the query: (i) the group nearest neighbor with keywords query, which finds a POI that optimizes the aggregate cost function for the whole group of size n, (ii) the subgroup nearest neighbor with keywords query, which finds the optimal subgroup and a POI that optimizes the aggregate cost function for a given subgroup size m (m <= n), and (iii) the multiple subgroup nearest neighbor with keywords query, which finds optimal subgroups and corresponding POIs for each of the subgroup sizes in the range [m, n]. We design query processing algorithms based on branch-and-bound and best-first paradigms. Finally, we provide theoretical bounds and conduct extensive experiments with two real datasets which verify the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed algorithms.Comment: 12 page

    The signal of Z±(4430)Z^\pm(4430) in nucleon-antinucleon scattering

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    We study the production of Z±(4430)Z^\pm(4430) at a nucleon-antinucleon scattering experiment. Considering the PANDA experiment to be an ideal platform to explore the production of the charmonium and charmonim-like states, we suggest the forthcoming PANDA experiment to pay attention to the production of Z±(4430)Z^\pm(4430).Comment: 6 pages, 15 figures. Published version in EPJ
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