189 research outputs found

    de Haas-van Alphen oscillations with non-parabolic dispersions

    Full text link
    de Haas-van Alphen oscillation spectrum of two-dimensional systems is studied for general power law energy dispersion, yielding a Fermi surface area of the form S(E)EαS(E)\propto E^\alpha for a given energy EE. The case α=1\alpha=1 stands for the parabolic energy dispersion. It is demonstrated that the periodicity of the magnetic oscillations in inverse field can depend notably on the temperature. We evaluated analytically the Fourier spectrum of these oscillations to evidence the frequency shift and smearing of the main peak structure as the temperature increases.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Eur. Phys. J.

    Effect of electronic band dispersion curvature on de Haas-van Alphen oscillations

    Full text link
    The effect of electronic band curvature, i.e. the deviation from parabolicity of electronic dispersion, on de Haas-van Alphen oscillations spectra is studied. Although the oscillations amplitude remain unaffected, it is demonstrated that non-quadratic terms of the Landau bands dispersion, which is particularly relevant in the case of Dirac fermions, induces a field- and temperature-dependent Onsager phase. As a result, a temperature-dependent shift of the de Haas-van Alphen oscillations frequency is predicted.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure

    Grassmann techniques applied to classical spin systems

    Full text link
    We review problems involving the use of Grassmann techniques in the field of classical spin systems in two dimensions. These techniques are useful to perform exact correspondences between classical spin Hamiltonians and field-theory fermionic actions. This contributes to a better understanding of critical behavior of these models in term of non-quadratic effective actions which can been seen as an extension of the free fermion Ising model. Within this method, identification of bare masses allows for an accurate estimation of critical points or lines and which is supported by Monte-Carlo results and diagrammatic techniques

    Random walks and magnetic oscillations in compensated metals

    Full text link
    The field- and temperature-dependent de Haas-van Alphen oscillations spectrum is studied for an ideal two-dimensional compensated metal whose Fermi surface is made of a linear chain of successive orbits with electron and hole character, coupled by magnetic breakdown. We show that the first harmonics amplitude can be accurately evaluated on the basis of the Lifshits-Kosevich (LK) formula by considering a set of random walks on the orbit network, in agreement with the numerical resolution of semi-classical equations. Oppositely, the second harmonics amplitude does not follow the LK behavior and vanishes at a critical value of the field-to-temperature ratio which depends explicitly on the relative value between the hole and electron effective masses.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Physical Review

    Critical properties of cluster size distribution in an asymmetric diffusion-aggregation model

    Get PDF
    International audienceWe consider a stochastic dynamics for a system of diffusing hard-core particles on a periodic chain with asymmetric diffusion rules. A given cluster of particles can diffuse to the right as a whole but the particle located on the left boundary of the cluster is allowed to break off from it and diffuse to the left. Clusters of particles can eventually merge with other clusters. These rules allow for the creation of clusters of different sizes. We discuss the size distribution of the clusters in the long time or steady state limit, as a function of the particle concentration c. We consider the general time dependent master equation based on Smoluchowski's theory for local cluster merging or fragmentation and diffusion processes, and study the solutions using the generating function in the large size limit. We found that there exists a critical density c∗ =√2 − 1 for which the cluster distribution decays like a power law with exponent 5/
    corecore