2,515 research outputs found
Directed current in the Holstein system
We propose a mechanism to rectify charge transport in the semiclassical
Holstein model. It is shown that localised initial conditions, associated with
a polaron solution, in conjunction with a nonreversion symmetric static
electron on-site potential constitute minimal prerequisites for the emergence
of a directed current in the underlying periodic lattice system. In particular,
we demonstrate that for unbiased spatially localised initial conditions,
violation of parity prevents the existence of pairs of counter-propagating
trajectories, thus allowing for a directed current despite the
time-reversibility of the equations of motion. Occurrence of long-range
coherent charge transport is demonstrated
Theory of a Narrow roton Absorption Line in the Spectrum of a Disk-Shaped SHF Resonator
We calculate the probability of the birth of a circular phonon (c-phonon) in
He II by a c-photon of the resonator. It is shown that this probability has
sharp maxima at frequencies, where the effective group velocity of the c-phonon
is equal to zero; the density of states of c-phonons strongly grows at such
frequencies. For He II, these frequencies correspond to a roton and a maxon.
From the probability of the c-roton birth, we calculate the roto line width
which is found to approximately agree with the experimental one. We conclude
that the roton line observed in the super-high-frequency (SHF) absorption
spectrum of helium is related to the birth of c-rotons. A possible
interpretation of the Stark effect observed for the roton line is also
proposed.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, v2: journal variant, several minor correction
Microscopic derivation of Frenkel excitons in second quantization
Starting from the microscopic hamiltonian describing free electrons in a
periodic lattice, we derive the hamiltonian appropriate to Frenkel excitons.
This is done through a grouping of terms different from the one leading to
Wannier excitons. This grouping makes appearing the atomic states as a relevant
basis to describe Frenkel excitons in the second quantization. Using them, we
derive the Frenkel exciton creation operators as well as the commutators which
rule these operators and which make the Frenkel excitons differing from
elementary bosons. The main goal of the present paper is to provide the
necessary grounds for future works on Frenkel exciton many-body effects, with
the composite nature of these particles treated exactly through a procedure
similar to the one we have recently developed for Wannier excitons.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
A Variational Approach to Nonlocal Exciton-Phonon Coupling
In this paper we apply variational energy band theory to a form of the
Holstein Hamiltonian in which the influence of lattice vibrations (optical
phonons) on both local site energies (local coupling) and transfers of
electronic excitations between neighboring sites (nonlocal coupling) is taken
into account. A flexible spanning set of orthonormal eigenfunctions of the
joint exciton-phonon crystal momentum is used to arrive at a variational
estimate (bound) of the ground state energy for every value of the joint
crystal momentum, yielding a variational estimate of the lowest polaron energy
band across the entire Brillouin zone, as well as the complete set of polaron
Bloch functions associated with this band. The variation is implemented
numerically, avoiding restrictive assumptions that have limited the scope of
previous assaults on the same and similar problems. Polaron energy bands and
the structure of the associated Bloch states are studied at general points in
the three-dimensional parameter space of the model Hamiltonian (electronic
tunneling, local coupling, nonlocal coupling), though our principal emphasis
lay in under-studied area of nonlocal coupling and its interplay with
electronic tunneling; a phase diagram summarizing the latter is presented. The
common notion of a "self-trapping transition" is addressed and generalized.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figure
Cylindrically symmetric solitons in Einstein-Yang-Mills theory
Recently new Einstein-Yang-Mills (EYM) soliton solutions were presented which
describe superconducting strings with Kasner asymptotic (hep-th/0610183). Here
we study the static cylindrically symmetric SU(2) EYM system in more detail.
The ansatz for the gauge field corresponds to superposition of the azimuthal
and the longitudinal components of the color magnetic field. We
derive sum rules relating data on the symmetry axis to asymptotic data and show
that generic asymptotic structure of regular solutions is Kasner. Solutions
starting with vacuum data on the axis generically are divergent. Regular
solutions correspond to some bifurcation manifold in the space of parameters
which has the low-energy limiting point corresponding to string solutions in
flat space (with the divergent total energy) and the high-curvature point where
gravity is crucial. Some analytical results are presented for the low energy
limit, and numerical bifurcation curves are constructed in the gravitating
case. Depending on the parameters, the solution looks like a straight string or
a pair of straight and circular strings. The existence of such non-linear
superposition of two strings becomes possible due to self-interaction terms in
the Yang-Mills action which suppress contribution of the circular string near
the polar axis.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
Anomalous tunneling of bound pairs in crystal lattices
A novel method of solving scattering problems for bound pairs on a lattice is
developed. Two different break ups of the hamiltonian are employed to calculate
the full Green operator and the wave function of the scattered pair. The
calculation converges exponentially in the number of basis states used to
represent the non-translation invariant part of the Green operator. The method
is general and applicable to a variety of scattering and tunneling problems. As
the first application, the problem of pair tunneling through a weak link on a
one-dimensional lattice is solved. It is found that at momenta close to \pi the
pair tunnels much easier than one particle, with the transmission coefficient
approaching unity. This anomalously high transmission is a consequence of the
existence of a two-body resonant state localized at the weak link.Comment: REVTeX, 5 pages, 4 eps figure
Second quantization method in the presence of bound states of particles
We develop an approximate second quantization method for describing the
many-particle systems in the presence of bound states of particles at low
energies (the kinetic energy of particles is small in comparison to the binding
energy of compound particles). In this approximation the compound and
elementary particles are considered on an equal basis. This means that creation
and annihilation operators of compound particles can be introduced. The
Hamiltonians, which specify the interactions between compound and elementary
particles and between compound particles themselves are found in terms of the
interaction amplitudes for elementary particles. The nonrelativistic quantum
electrodynamics is developed for systems containing both elementary and
compound particles. Some applications of this theory are considered.Comment: 35 page
Phonon Coherence and New Set of Sidebands in Phonon-Assisted Photoluminescence
We investigate excitonic polaron states comprising a local exciton and
phonons in the longitudinal optical (LO) mode by solving the Schr\"{o}dinger
equation. We derive an exact expression for the ground state (GS), which
includes multi-phonon components with coefficients satisfying the Huang-Rhys
factors. The recombination of GS and excited polaron states gives one set of
sidebands in photoluminescence (PL): the multi-phonon components in the GS
produce the Stokes lines and the zero-phonon components in the excited states
produce the anti-Stokes lines. By introducing the mixing of the LO mode and
environal phonon modes, the exciton will also couple with the latter, and the
resultant polaron states result in another set of phonon sidebands. This set
has a zero-phonon line higher and wider than that of the first set due to the
tremendous number of the environal modes. The energy spacing between the
zero-phonon lines of the first and second sets is proved to be the binding
energy of the GS state. The common exciton origin of these two sets can be
further verified by a characteristic Fano lineshape induced by the coherence in
the mixing of the LO and the environal modes.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures 1 figure (fig. 1) replaced 1 figure (fig. 2)
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Coherent charge transport through molecular wires: "Exciton blocking" and current from electronic excitations in the wire
We consider exciton effects on current in molecular nanojunctions, using a
model comprising a two two-level sites bridge connecting free electron
reservoirs. Expanding the density operator in the many-electron eigenstates of
the uncoupled sites, we obtain a 16X16 density matrix in the bridge subspace
whose dynamics is governed by Liuoville equation that takes into account
interactions on the bridge as well as electron injection and damping to and
from the leads. Our consideration can be considerably simplified by using the
pseudospin description based on the symmetry properties of Lie group SU(2). We
study the influence of the bias voltage, the Coulomb repulsion and the
energy-transfer interactions on the steady-state current and in particular
focus on the effect of the excitonic interaction between bridge sites. Our
calculations show that in case of non-interacting electrons this interaction
leads to reduction in the current at high voltage for a homodimer bridge. In
other words, we predict the effect of \textquotedblleft
exciton\textquotedblright blocking. The effect of \textquotedblleft
exciton\textquotedblright blocking is modified for a heterodimer bridge, and
disappears for strong Coulomb repulsion at sites. In the latter case the
exciton type interactions can open new channels for electronic conduction. In
particular, in the case of strong Coulomb repulsion, conduction exists even
when the electronic connectivity does not exist.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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