57,047 research outputs found

    Magnetoconductivity in Weyl semimetals: Effect of chemical potential and temperature

    Full text link
    We present the detailed analyses of magneto-conductivities in a Weyl semimetal within Born and self-consistent Born approximations. In the presence of the charged impurities, the linear magnetoresistance can happen when the charge carriers are mainly from the zeroth (n=0) Landau level. Interestingly, the linear magnetoresistance is very robust against the change of temperature, as long as the charge carriers mainly come from the zeroth Landau level. We denote this parameter regime as the high-field regime. On the other hand, the linear magnetoresistance disappears once the charge carriers from the higher Landau levels can provide notable contributions. Our analysis indicates that the deviation from the linear magnetoresistance is mainly due to the deviation of the longitudinal conductivity from the 1/B1/B behavior. We found two important features of the self-energy approximation: 1. a dramatic jump of σxx\sigma_{xx}, when the n=1n=1 Landau level begins to contribute charge carriers, which is the beginning point of the middle-field regime, when decreasing the external magnetic field from high field; 2. In the low-field regime σxx\sigma_{xx} shows a B5/3B^{-5/3} behavior and results the magnetoresistance ρxx\rho_{xx} to show a B1/3B^{1/3} behavior. The detailed and careful numerical calculation indicates that the self-energy approximation (including both the Born and the self-consistent Born approximations) does not explain the recent experimental observation of linear magnetoresistance in Weyl semimetals.Comment: The accepted version. Extending the previous version by including the discussions of self-consistent Born approximatio

    Laser Field Induced Birefringence and Enhancement of Magneto-optical Rotation

    Get PDF
    An initially isotropic medium, when subjected to either a magnetic field or a coherent field, can induce anisotropy in the medium and can cause the polarization of a probe field to rotate. Therefore the rotation of probe polarization, due to magnetic field alone, can be controlled efficiently with the use of a coherent control field. We demonstrate this enhancement of the magneto-optical rotation (MOR) of a linearly polarized light, by doing detailed calculations on a system with relevant transitions j=0j=1j=0j=0\leftrightarrow j=1\leftrightarrow j=0.Comment: 9 pages including 4 Figure

    Charmless BPV,VVB \to PV, VV decays and new physics effects in the mSUGRA model

    Full text link
    By employing the QCD factorization approach, we calculate the new physics contributions to the branching radios of the two-body charmless BPV B \to PV and BVVB \to VV decays in the framework of the minimal supergravity (mSUGRA) model. we choose three typical sets of the mSUGRA input parameters in which the Wilson coefficient C7γ(mb)C_{7\gamma}(m_b) can be either SM-like (the case A and C) or has a flipped-sign (the case B). We found numerically that (a) the SUSY contributions are always very small for both case A and C; (b) for those tree-dominated decays, the SUSY contributions in case B are also very small; (c) for those QCD penguin-dominated decay modes, the SUSY contributions in case B can be significant, and can provide an enhancement about 3030% \sim 260% to the branching ratios of BK(π,ϕ,ρ)B \to K^*(\pi,\phi,\rho) and KϕK \phi decays, but a reduction about 3030% \sim 80% to BK(ρ,ω) B\to K(\rho, \omega) decays; and (d) the large SUSY contributions in the case B may be masked by the large theoretical errors dominated by the uncertainty from our ignorance of calculating the annihilation contributions in the QCD factorization approach.Comment: 34 pages, 8 PS figures, this is the correct version
    corecore