5,107 research outputs found

    Angle-resolved photoemission spectra in the cuprates from the d-density wave theory

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    Angle-resolved photoemission spectra present two challenges for the d-density wave (DDW) theory of the pseudogap state of the cuprates: (1) hole pockets near (Ï€/2,Ï€/2)(\pi/2,\pi/2) are not observed, in apparent contradiction with the assumption of translational symmetry breaking, and (2) there are no well-defined quasiparticles at the {\it antinodal} points, in contradiction with the predictions of mean-field theory of this broken symmetry state. Here, we show how these puzzles can be resolved.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, RevTex

    Spin-spin Correlation lengths of Bilayer Antiferromagnets

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    The spin-spin correlation length and the static structure factor for bilayer antiferromagnets, such as YBa2_2Cu3_3O6_{6}, are calculated using field theoretical and numerical methods. It is shown that these quantities can be directly measured in neutron scattering experiments using energy integrated two-axis scan despite the strong intensity modulation perpendicular to the layers. Our calculations show that the correlation length of the bilayer antiferromagnet diverges considerably more rapidly, as the temperature tends to zero, than the correlation length of the corresponding single layer antiferromagnet typified by La2_2CuO4_4. This rapid divergence may have important consequences with respect to magnetic fluctuations of the doped superconductors.Comment: This paper supersedes cond-mat/9703138 and contains numerical simulation results to compare against analytical results. 6 pages, 2 postscript figures (embedded), uses EuroPhys.sty and EuroMac

    Spectral Anomaly and High Temperature Superconductors

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    Spectral anomaly for interacting Fermions is characterized by the spectral function A([k−kF],ω)A([k-k_F],\omega) satisfying the scaling relation A(Λy1[k−kF],Λy2ω)=ΛyAA([k−kF],ω)A(\Lambda^{y_1} [k-k_F],\Lambda^{y_2}\omega)= \Lambda^{y_A}A([k-k_F],\omega), where y1y_1, y2y_2, and yAy_A are the exponents defining the universality class. For a Fermi liquid y1=1y_1=1, y2=1y_2=1, yA=−1y_A=-1; all other values of the exponents are termed anomalous. In this paper, an example for which y1=1y_1=1, y2=1y_2=1, but yA=α−1y_A=\alpha-1 is considered in detail. Attractive interaction added to such a critical system leads to a novel superconducting state, which is explored and its relevance to high temperature cuprate superconductors is discussed.Comment: RevTex, 53 pages (including figures

    Superconductivity in hole-doped C60 from electronic correlations

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    We derive a model for the highest occupied molecular orbital band of a C60 crystal which includes on-site electron-electron interactions. The form of the interactions are based on the icosahedral symmetry of the C60 molecule together with a perturbative treatment of an isolated C60 molecule. Using this model we do a mean-field calculation in two dimensions on the [100] surface of the crystal. Due to the multi-band nature we find that electron-electron interactions can have a profound effect on the density of states as a function of doping. The doping dependence of the transition temperature can then be qualitatively different from that expected from simple BCS theory based on the density of states from band structure calculations

    On the ground state of metallic hydrogen

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    A proposed liquid ground state of metallic hydrogen at zero temperature is explored and a variational upper bound to the ground state energy is calculated. The possibility that the metallic hydrogen is a liquid around the metastable point (rs = 1.64) cannot be ruled out. This conclusion crucially hinges on the contribution to the energy arising from the third order in the electron-proton interaction which is shown here to be more significant in the liquid phase than in crystals

    An explanation for a universality of transition temperatures in families of copper oxide superconductors

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    A remarkable mystery of the copper oxide high-transition-temperature (Tc) superconductors is the dependence of Tc on the number of CuO2 layers, n, in the unit cell of a crystal. In a given family of these superconductors, Tc rises with the number of layers, reaching a peak at n=3, and then declines: the result is a bell-shaped curve. Despite the ubiquity of this phenomenon, it is still poorly understood and attention has instead been mainly focused on the properties of a single CuO2 plane. Here we show that the quantum tunnelling of Cooper pairs between the layers simply and naturally explains the experimental results, when combined with the recently quantified charge imbalance of the layers and the latest notion of a competing order nucleated by this charge imbalance that suppresses superconductivity. We calculate the bell-shaped curve and show that, if materials can be engineered so as to minimize the charge imbalance as n increases, Tc can be raised further.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. The version published in Natur

    The effects of magnetic field on the d-density wave order in the cuprates

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    We consider the effects of a perpendicular magnetic field on the d-density wave order and conclude that if the pseudogap phase in the cuprates is due to this order, then it is highly insensitive to the magnetic field in the underdoped regime, while its sensitivity increases as the gap vanishes in the overdoped regime. This appears to be consistent with the available experiments and can be tested further in neutron scattering experiments. We also investigate the nature of the de Haas- van Alphen effect in the ordered state and discuss the possibility of observing it.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, RevTex4. Corrected a silly but important typo in the abstrac

    Quantum oscillations in YBa2Cu3O6+δ\mathrm{YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{6+\delta}} from an incommensurate dd-density wave order

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    We consider quantum oscillation experiments in YBa2Cu3O6+δ\mathrm{YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{6+\delta}} from the perspective of an incommensurate Fermi surface reconstruction using an exact transfer matrix method and the Pichard-Landauer formula for the conductivity. The specific density wave order considered is a period-8 dd-density wave in which the current density is unidirectionally modulated. The current modulation is also naturally accompanied by a period-4 site charge modulation in the same direction, which is consistent with recent magnetic resonance measurements. In principle Landau theory also allows for a period-4 bond charge modulation, which is not discussed, but should be simple to incorporate in the future. This scenario leads to a natural, but not a unique, explanation of why only oscillations from a single electron pocket is observed, and a hole pocket of roughly twice the frequency as dictated by two-fold commensurate order, and the corresponding Luttinger sum rule, is not observed. However, it is possible that even higher magnetic fields will reveal a hole pocket of half the frequency of the electron pocket or smaller. This may be at the borderline of achievable high field measurements because at least a few complete oscillations have to be clearly resolved.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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