3,563 research outputs found

    Boundary integral equation methods for the elastic and thermoelastic waves in three dimensions

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    In this paper, we consider the boundary integral equation (BIE) method for solving the exterior Neumann boundary value problems of elastic and thermoelastic waves in three dimensions based on the Fredholm integral equations of the first kind. The innovative contribution of this work lies in the proposal of the new regularized formulations for the hyper-singular boundary integral operators (BIO) associated with the time-harmonic elastic and thermoelastic wave equations. With the help of the new regularized formulations, we only need to compute the integrals with weak singularities at most in the corresponding variational forms of the boundary integral equations. The accuracy of the regularized formulations is demonstrated through numerical examples using the Galerkin boundary element method (BEM).Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure

    Topological phase in 1D1D topological Kondo insulator: Z2Z_{2} topological insulator, Haldane-like phase and Kondo breakdown

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    We have simulated a half-filled 1D1D pp-wave periodic Anderson model with numerically exact projector quantum Monte Carlo technique, and the system is indeed located in the Haldane-like state as detected in previous works on the pp-wave Kondo lattice model, though the soluble non-interacting limit corresponds to the conventional Z2Z_{2} topological insulator. The site-resolved magnetization in an open boundary system and strange correlator for the periodic boundary have been used to identify the mentioned topological states. Interestingly, the edge magnetization in the Haldane-like state is not saturated to unit magnetic moment due to the intrinsic charge fluctuation in our periodic Anderson-like model, which is beyond the description of the Kondo lattice-like model in existing literature. The finding here underlies the correlation driven topological state in this prototypical interacting topological state of matter and naive use of non-interacting picture should be taken care. Moreover, no trace of the surface Kondo breakdown at zero temperature is observed and it is suspected that frustration-like interaction may be crucial in inducing such radical destruction of Kondo screening. The findings here may be relevant to our understanding of interacting topological materials like topological Kondo insulator candidate SmB6_{6}.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted by EPJ

    Superfluid density in the slave-boson theory

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    Despite of the success of the slave-boson theory in capturing qualitative physics of high-temperature superconductors like cuprates, it fails to reproduce the correct temperature-dependent behavior of superfluid density, let alone the independence of the linear temperature term on doping in the underdoped regimes of hole-doped cuprate, a common experimental observation in different cuprates. It remains puzzling up to now in spite of intensive theoretical efforts. For electron-doped case, even qualitative treatment is not reported at present time. Here we revisit these problems and provide an alternative superfluid density formulation by using the London relation instead of employing the paramagnetic current-current correlation function. The obtained formula, on the one hand, provides the correct temperature-dependent behavior of the superfluid density in the whole temperature regime, on the other hand, makes the doping dependence of the linear temperature term substantially weaken and a possible interpretation for its independence on doping is proposed. As an application, electron-doped cuprate is studied, whose result qualitatively agrees with existing experiments and successfully explains the origin of dd- to anisotropic ss-wave transition across the optimal doping. Our result remedies some failures of the slave-boson theory as employed to calculate superfluid density in cuprates and may be useful in the understanding of the related physics in other strongly correlated systems, e.g. Nax_{x}CoO2_{2}â‹…\cdotyH2_{2}O and certain iron-based superconductors with dominating local magnetic exchange interaction.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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