43,116 research outputs found

    Bifurcation analysis and phase diagram of a spin-string model with buckled states

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    We analyze a one-dimensional spin-string model, in which string oscillators are linearly coupled to their two nearest neighbors and to Ising spins representing internal degrees of freedom. String-spin coupling induces a long-range ferromagnetic interaction among spins that competes with a spin-spin antiferromagnetic coupling. As a consequence, the complex phase diagram of the system exhibits different flat rippled and buckled states, with first or second order transition lines between states. The two-dimensional version of the model has a similar phase diagram, which has been recently used to explain the rippled to buckled transition observed in scanning tunnelling microscopy experiments with suspended graphene sheets. Here we describe in detail the phase diagram of the simpler one-dimensional model and phase stability using bifurcation theory. This gives additional insight into the physical mechanisms underlying the different phases and the behavior observed in experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure

    Exact solution of the Schr\"{o}dinger equation for an hydrogen atom at the interface between the vacuum and a topologically insulating surface

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    When an hydrogen atom is brought near to the interface between θ\theta-media, the quantum-mechanical motion of the electron will be affected by the electromagnetic interaction between the atomic charges and the θ\theta-interface, which is described by an axionic extension of Maxwell electrodynamics in the presence of a boundary. In this paper we investigate the atom-surface interaction effects upon the energy levels and wave functions of an hydrogen atom placed at the interface between a θ\theta-medium and the vacuum. In the approximation considered, the Schr\"{o}dinger equation can be exactly solved by separation of variables in terms of hypergeometic functions for the angular part and hydrogenic functions for the radial part. In order to make such effects apparent we deal with unrealistic high values of the θ\theta-parameter. We also compute the energy shifts using perturbation theory for a particular small value of θ\theta and we demonstrate that they are in a very good agreement with the ones obtained from the exact solution.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables, Accepted for publication in the European Physics Journal

    Green's function approach to Chern-Simons extended electrodynamics: an effective theory describing topological insulators

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    Boundary effects produced by a Chern-Simons (CS) extension to electrodynamics are analyzed exploiting the Green's function (GF) method. We consider the electromagnetic field coupled to a θ\theta-term in a way that has been proposed to provide the correct low energy effective action for topological insulators (TI). We take the θ\theta-term to be piecewise constant in different regions of space separated by a common interface Σ\Sigma, to be called the θ\theta-boundary. Features arising due to the presence of the boundary, such as magnetoelectric effects, are already known in CS extended electrodynamics and solutions for some experimental setups have been found with specific configuration of sources. In this work we illustrate a method to construct the GF that allows to solve the CS modified field equations for a given θ\theta-boundary with otherwise arbitrary configuration of sources. The method is illustrated by solving the case of a planar θ\theta-boundary but can also be applied for cylindrical and spherical geometries for which the θ\theta-boundary can be characterized by a surface where a given coordinate remains constant. The static fields of a point-like charge interacting with a planar TI, as described by a planar discontinuity in θ\theta, are calculated and successfully compared with previously reported results. We also compute the force between the charge and the θ\theta-boundary by two different methods, using the energy momentum tensor approach and the interaction energy calculated via the GF. The infinitely straight current-carrying wire is also analyzed
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