10,964 research outputs found
Modulated phases in magnetic models frustrated by long-range interactions
We study an Ising model in one dimension with short range ferromagnetic and
long range (power law) antiferromagnetic interactions. We show that the zero
temperature phase diagram in a (longitudinal) field H involves a sequence of up
and down domains whose size varies continuously with H, between -H_c and H_c
which represent the edge of the ferromagnetic up and down phases. The
implications of long range interaction in many body systems are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Quantum Griffiths Singularities in the Transverse-Field Ising Spin Glass
We report a Monte Carlo study of the effects of {\it fluctuations} in the
bond distribution of Ising spin glasses in a transverse magnetic field, in the
{\it paramagnetic phase} in the limit. Rare, strong fluctuations give
rise to Griffiths singularities, which can dominate the zero-temperature
behavior of these quantum systems, as originally demonstrated by McCoy for
one-dimensional () systems. Our simulations are done on a square lattice
in and a cubic lattice in , for a gaussian distribution of nearest
neighbor (only) bonds. In , where the {\it linear} susceptibility was
found to diverge at the critical transverse field strength for the
order-disorder phase transition at T=0, the average {\it nonlinear}
susceptibility diverges in the paramagnetic phase for well
above , as is also demonstrated in the accompanying paper by Rieger
and Young. In , the linear susceptibility remains finite at ,
and while Griffiths singularity effects are certainly observable in the
paramagnetic phase, the nonlinear susceptibility appears to diverge only rather
close to . These results show that Griffiths singularities remain
persistent in dimensions above one (where they are known to be strong), though
their magnitude decreases monotonically with increasing dimensionality (there
being no Griffiths singularities in the limit of infinite dimensionality).Comment: 20 pages, REVTEX, 6 eps figures included using the epsf macros; to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Radiative-Recoil Corrections of Order to Lamb Shift Revisited
The results and main steps of an analytic calculation of radiative-recoil
corrections of order to the Lamb shift in hydrogen
are presented. The calculations are performed in the infrared safe Yennie
gauge. The discrepancy between two previous numerical calculations of these
corrections existing in the literature is resolved. Our new result eliminates
the largest source of the theoretical uncertainty in the magnitude of the
deuterium-hydrogen isotope shift.Comment: 14 pages, REVTE
Exchange coupling between silicon donors: the crucial role of the central cell and mass anisotropy
Donors in silicon are now demonstrated as one of the leading candidates for
implementing qubits and quantum information processing. Single qubit
operations, measurements and long coherence times are firmly established, but
progress on controlling two qubit interactions has been slower. One reason for
this is that the inter donor exchange coupling has been predicted to oscillate
with separation, making it hard to estimate in device designs. We present a
multivalley effective mass theory of a donor pair in silicon, including both a
central cell potential and the effective mass anisotropy intrinsic in the Si
conduction band. We are able to accurately describe the single donor properties
of valley-orbit coupling and the spatial extent of donor wave functions,
highlighting the importance of fitting measured values of hyperfine coupling
and the orbital energy of the levels. Ours is a simple framework that can
be applied flexibly to a range of experimental scenarios, but it is nonetheless
able to provide fast and reliable predictions. We use it to estimate the
exchange coupling between two donor electrons and we find a smoothing of its
expected oscillations, and predict a monotonic dependence on separation if two
donors are spaced precisely along the [100] direction.Comment: Published version. Corrected b and B values from previous versio
Hopping Conduction in Uniaxially Stressed Si:B near the Insulator-Metal Transition
Using uniaxial stress to tune the critical density near that of the sample,
we have studied in detail the low-temperature conductivity of p-type Si:B in
the insulating phase very near the metal-insulator transition. For all values
of temperature and stress, the conductivity collapses onto a single universal
scaling curve. For large values of the argument, the scaling function is well
fit by the exponentially activated form associated with variable range hopping
when electron-electron interactions cause a soft Coulomb gap in the density of
states at the Fermi energy. The temperature dependence of the prefactor,
corresponding to the T-dependence of the critical curve, has been determined
reliably for this system, and is proportional to the square-root of T. We show
explicitly that nevlecting the prefactor leads to substantial errors in the
determination of the scaling parameters and the critical exponents derived from
them. The conductivity is not consistent with Mott variable-range hopping in
the critical region nor does it obey this form for any range of the parameters.
Instead, for smaller argument of the scaling function, the conductivity of Si:B
is well fit by an exponential form with exponent 0.31 related to the critical
exponents of the system at the metal- insulator transition.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
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