235 research outputs found
Scale effects for strength, ductility, and toughness in "brittle” materials
Decreasing scales effectively increase nearly all important mechanical properties of at least some "brittle” materials below 100 nm. With an emphasis on silicon nanopillars, nanowires, and nanospheres, it is shown that strength, ductility, and toughness all increase roughly with the inverse radius of the appropriate dimension. This is shown experimentally as well as on a mechanistic basis using a proposed dislocation shielding model. Theoretically, this collects a reasonable array of semiconductors and ceramics onto the same field using fundamental physical parameters. This gives proportionality between fracture toughness and the other mechanical properties. Additionally, this leads to a fundamental concept of work per unit fracture area, which predicts the critical event for brittle fracture. In semibrittle materials such as silicon, this can occur at room temperature when the scale is sufficiently small. When the local stress associated with dislocation nucleation increases to that sufficient to break bonds, an instability occurs resulting in fractur
Operator-Based Truncation Scheme Based on the Many-Body Fermion Density Matrix
In [S. A. Cheong and C. L. Henley, cond-mat/0206196 (2002)], we found that
the many-particle eigenvalues and eigenstates of the many-body density matrix
of a block of sites cut out from an infinite chain of
noninteracting spinless fermions can all be constructed out of the one-particle
eigenvalues and one-particle eigenstates respectively. In this paper we
developed a statistical-mechanical analogy between the density matrix
eigenstates and the many-body states of a system of noninteracting fermions.
Each density matrix eigenstate corresponds to a particular set of occupation of
single-particle pseudo-energy levels, and the density matrix eigenstate with
the largest weight, having the structure of a Fermi sea ground state,
unambiguously defines a pseudo-Fermi level. We then outlined the main ideas
behind an operator-based truncation of the density matrix eigenstates, where
single-particle pseudo-energy levels far away from the pseudo-Fermi level are
removed as degrees of freedom. We report numerical evidence for scaling
behaviours in the single-particle pseudo-energy spectrum for different block
sizes and different filling fractions \nbar. With the aid of these
scaling relations, which tells us that the block size plays the role of an
inverse temperature in the statistical-mechanical description of the density
matrix eigenstates and eigenvalues, we looked into the performance of our
operator-based truncation scheme in minimizing the discarded density matrix
weight and the error in calculating the dispersion relation for elementary
excitations. This performance was compared against that of the traditional
density matrix-based truncation scheme, as well as against a operator-based
plane wave truncation scheme, and found to be very satisfactory.Comment: 22 pages in RevTeX4 format, 22 figures. Uses amsmath, amssymb,
graphicx and mathrsfs package
Landau Ginzburg theory of the d-wave Josephson junction
This letter discusses the Landau Ginzburg theory of a Josephson junction
composed of on one side a pure d-wave superconductor oriented with the
axis normal to the junction and on the other side either s-wave or d-wave
oriented with normal to the junction. We use simple symmetry arguments
to show that the Josephson current as a function of the phase must have the
form . In principle vanishes
for a perfect junction of this type, but anisotropy effects, either due to a-b
axis asymmetry or junction imperfections can easily cause to be
quite large even in a high quality junction. If is sufficiently
small and is negative local time reversal symmetry breaking will appear.
Arbitrary values of the flux would then be pinned to corners between such
junctions and occasionally on junction faces, which is consistent with
experiments by Kirtley et al
Staggered flux and stripes in doped antiferromagnets
We have numerically investigated whether or not a mean-field theory of spin
textures generate fictitious flux in the doped two dimensional -model.
First we consider the properties of uniform systems and then we extend the
investigation to include models of striped phases where a fictitious flux is
generated in the domain wall providing a possible source for lowering the
kinetic energy of the holes. We have compared the energetics of uniform systems
with stripes directed along the (10)- and (11)-directions of the lattice,
finding that phase-separation generically turns out to be energetically
favorable. In addition to the numerical calculations, we present topological
arguments relating flux and staggered flux to geometric properties of the spin
texture. The calculation is based on a projection of the electron operators of
the model into a spin texture with spinless fermions.Comment: RevTex, 19 pages including 20 figure
Product Wave Function Renormalization Group: construction from the matrix product point of view
We present a construction of a matrix product state (MPS) that approximates
the largest-eigenvalue eigenvector of a transfer matrix T, for the purpose of
rapidly performing the infinite system density matrix renormalization group
(DMRG) method applied to two-dimensional classical lattice models. We use the
fact that the largest-eigenvalue eigenvector of T can be approximated by a
state vector created from the upper or lower half of a finite size cluster.
Decomposition of the obtained state vector into the MPS gives a way of
extending the MPS, at the system size increment process in the infinite system
DMRG algorithm. As a result, we successfully give the physical interpretation
of the product wave function renormalization group (PWFRG) method, and obtain
its appropriate initial condition.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Gapless Phases in an s=1/2 Quantum Spin Chain with Bond Alternation
The XXZ spin chain with the staggered XY anisotropy is shown to possess gapless, Luttinger-liquid-like phases in a
wide range of its parameters: the XY-like phase and spin nematic phases, the
latter characterized by a two-spin order parameter breaking translational and
spin rotation symmetries. In the simplest, exactly solvable case ,
the spectrum remains gapless at arbitrary and and is described by
two massless Majorana (real) fermions with different velocities . At the staggered XY anisotropy does not influence
the ground state of the system (XY phase). At , due to level
crossing, a spin nematic state is realized, with and local symmetry of the
and spin correlations. The spin correlation functions are calculated
and the effect of thermally induced spin nematic ordering in the XY phase
("order from disorder") is discussed. The role of a finite is studied
in the limiting cases Comment: 25 pages, REVTEX; (to appear in Phys.Rev.B), ITP-CTH 9437
Incommensurate structures studied by a modified Density Matrix Renormalization Group Method
A modified density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) method is introduced
and applied to classical two-dimensional models: the anisotropic triangular
nearest- neighbor Ising (ATNNI) model and the anisotropic triangular
next-nearest-neighbor Ising (ANNNI) model. Phase diagrams of both models have
complex structures and exhibit incommensurate phases. It was found that the
incommensurate phase completely separates the disordered phase from one of the
commensurate phases, i. e. the non-existence of the Lifshitz point in phase
diagrams of both models was confirmed.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures included in text, LaTeX2e, submitted to PRB,
presented at MECO'24 1999 (Wittenberg, Germany
Conformations of Linear DNA
We examine the conformations of a model for under- and overwound DNA. The
molecule is represented as a cylindrically symmetric elastic string subjected
to a stretching force and to constraints corresponding to a specification of
the link number. We derive a fundamental relation between the Euler angles that
describe the curve and the topological linking number. Analytical expressions
for the spatial configurations of the molecule in the infinite- length limit
were obtained. A unique configuraion minimizes the energy for a given set of
physical conditions. An elastic model incorporating thermal fluctuations
provides excellent agreement with experimental results on the plectonemic
transition.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX; 6 postscript figure
Partial Homology Relations - Satisfiability in terms of Di-Cographs
Directed cographs (di-cographs) play a crucial role in the reconstruction of
evolutionary histories of genes based on homology relations which are binary
relations between genes. A variety of methods based on pairwise sequence
comparisons can be used to infer such homology relations (e.g.\ orthology,
paralogy, xenology). They are \emph{satisfiable} if the relations can be
explained by an event-labeled gene tree, i.e., they can simultaneously co-exist
in an evolutionary history of the underlying genes. Every gene tree is
equivalently interpreted as a so-called cotree that entirely encodes the
structure of a di-cograph. Thus, satisfiable homology relations must
necessarily form a di-cograph. The inferred homology relations might not cover
each pair of genes and thus, provide only partial knowledge on the full set of
homology relations. Moreover, for particular pairs of genes, it might be known
with a high degree of certainty that they are not orthologs (resp.\ paralogs,
xenologs) which yields forbidden pairs of genes. Motivated by this observation,
we characterize (partial) satisfiable homology relations with or without
forbidden gene pairs, provide a quadratic-time algorithm for their recognition
and for the computation of a cotree that explains the given relations
Continuous Matrix Product Ansatz for the One-Dimensional Bose Gas with Point Interaction
We study a matrix product representation of the Bethe ansatz state for the
Lieb-Linger model describing the one-dimensional Bose gas with delta-function
interaction. We first construct eigenstates of the discretized model in the
form of matrix product states using the algebraic Bethe ansatz. Continuous
matrix product states are then exactly obtained in the continuum limit with a
finite number of particles. The factorizing -matrices in the lattice model
are indispensable for the continuous matrix product states and lead to a marked
reduction from the original bosonic system with infinite degrees of freedom to
the five-vertex model.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
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