21,227 research outputs found
Buckling and d-Wave Pairing in HiTc-Superconductors
We have investigated whether the electron-phonon interaction can support a
d-wave gap-anisotropy. On the basis of models derived from LDA calculations, as
well as LDA linear-response calculations we argue that this is the case, for
materials with buckled or dimpled CuO2 planes, for the so-called buckling
modes, which involve out-of-plane movements of the plane oxygens.Comment: 5pages, Latex2e, 6 Postscript figure
First-principle Wannier functions and effective lattice fermion models for narrow-band compounds
We propose a systematic procedure for constructing effective lattice fermion
models for narrow-band compounds on the basis of first-principles electronic
structure calculations. The method is illustrated for the series of
transition-metal (TM) oxides: SrVO, YTiO, VO, and
YMoO. It consists of three parts, starting from LDA. (i)
construction of the kinetic energy Hamiltonian using downfolding method. (ii)
solution of an inverse problem and construction of the Wannier functions (WFs)
for the given kinetic energy Hamiltonian. (iii) calculation of screened Coulomb
interactions in the basis of \textit{auxiliary} WFs, for which the
kinetic-energy term is set to be zero. The last step is necessary in order to
avoid the double counting of the kinetic-energy term, which is included
explicitly into the model. The screened Coulomb interactions are calculated in
a hybrid scheme. First, we evaluate the screening caused by the change of
occupation numbers and the relaxation of the LMTO basis functions, using the
conventional constraint-LDA approach, where all matrix elements of
hybridization involving the TM orbitals are set to be zero. Then, we switch
on the hybridization and evaluate the screening associated with the change of
this hybridization in RPA. The second channel of screening is very important,
and results in a relatively small value of the effective Coulomb interaction
for isolated bands. We discuss details of this screening and consider
its band-filling dependence, frequency dependence, influence of the lattice
distortion, proximity of other bands, and the dimensionality of the model
Hamiltonian.Comment: 35 pages, 25 figure
The origin of a and e' orderings in NaCoO
It has often been suggested that correlation effects suppress the small e_g'
Fermi surface pockets of NaxCoO_2 that are predicted by LDA, but absent in
ARPES measurements. It appears that within the dynamical mean field theory
(DMFT) the ARPES can be reproduced only if the on-site energy of the eg'
complex is lower than that of the a1g complex at the one-electron level, prior
to the addition of local correlation effects. Current estimates regarding the
order of the two orbital complexes range from -200 meV to 315 meV in therms of
the energy difference. In this work, we perform density functional theory
calculations of this one-electron splitting \Delta= \epsilon_a1g-\epsilon_e_g'
for the full two-layer compound, Na2xCo2O4, accounting for the effects of Na
ordering, interplanar interactions and octahedral distortion. We find that
\epsilon a_1g-\epsilon e_g' is negative for all Na fillings and that this is
primarily due to the strongly positive Coulomb field created by Na+ ions in the
intercalant plane. This field disproportionately affects the a_1g orbital which
protrudes farther upward from the Co plane than the e_g' orbitals. We discuss
also the secondary effects of octahedral compression and multi-orbital filling
on the value of \Delta as a function of Na content. Our results indicate that
if the e_g' pockets are indeed suppressed that can only be due to nonlocal
correlation effects beyond the standard DMFT.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Competition between Electron-Phonon coupling and Spin Fluctuations in superconducting hole-doped BiOCuS
BiOCuS is a band insulator that becomes metallic upon hole doping.
Superconductivity was recently reported in doped BiOCuS and attributed
to spin fluctuations as a pairing mechanism. Based on first principles
calculations of the electron-phonon coupling, we argue that the latter is very
strong in this material, and probably drives superconductivity, which is
however strongly depressed by the proximity to magnetism. We find however that
BiOCuS is a quite unique compound where both a conventional
phonon-driven and an unconventional triplet superconductivity are possible, and
compete with each other. We argue that, in this material, it should be possible
to switch from conventional to unconventional superconductivity by varying such
parameters as doping or pressure
Is the Redshift Clustering of Long-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts Significant?
The 26 long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with known redshifts form a
distinct cosmological set, selected differently than other cosmological probes
such as quasars and galaxies. Since the progenitors are now believed to be
connected with active star-formation and since burst emission penetrates dust,
one hope is that with a uniformly-selected sample, the large-scale redshift
distribution of GRBs can help constrain the star-formation history of the
Universe. However, we show that strong observational biases in ground-based
redshift discovery hamper a clean determination of the large-scale GRB rate and
hence the connection of GRBs to the star formation history. We then focus on
the properties of the small-scale (clustering) distribution of GRB redshifts.
When corrected for heliocentric motion relative to the local Hubble flow, the
observed redshifts appear to show a propensity for clustering: 8 of 26 GRBs
occurred within a recession velocity difference of 1000 km/s of another GRB.
That is, 4 pairs of GRBs occurred within 30 h_65^-1 Myr in cosmic time, despite
being causally separated on the sky. We investigate the significance of this
clustering. Comparison of the numbers of close redshift pairs expected from the
simulation with that observed shows no significant small-scale clustering
excess in the present sample; however, the four close pairs occur only in about
twenty percent of the simulated datasets (the precise significance of the
clustering is dependent upon the modeled biases). We conclude with some
impetuses and suggestions for future precise GRB redshift measurements.Comment: Published in the Astronomical Journal, June 2003: see
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2003AJ....125.2865
Ultrabright Linearly Polarized Photon Generation from a Nitrogen Vacancy Center in a Nanocube Dimer Antenna
We demonstrate an exceptionally bright photon source based on a single
nitrogen- vacancy center (NV-center) in a nanodiamond (ND), placed in the
nanoscale gap between two monocrystalline silver cubes in a dimer
configuration. The system is operated near saturation at a stable photon rate
of 850 kcps, while we further achieve strongly polarized emission and high
single photon purity, evident by the measured auto-correlation with a
g(2)(0)-value of 0.08. These photon source features are key parameters for
quantum technological applications, such as secure communication based on
quantum key distribution. The cube antenna is assembled with an atomic force
microscope, which allows us to predetermine the dipole orientation of the
NV-center and optimize cube positioning accordingly, while also tracking the
evolution of emission parameters from isolated ND to the 1 and 2 cube
configuration. The experiment is well described by finite element modelling,
assuming an instrinsic quantum efficiency of 0.35. We attribute the large
photon rate of the assembled photon source, to increased quantum efficiency of
the NV-center and high antenna efficiency
The prompt energy release of gamma-ray bursts using a cosmological k-correction
The fluences of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are measured with a variety of
instruments in different detector energy ranges. A detailed comparison of the
implied energy releases of the GRB sample requires, then, an accurate
accounting of this diversity in fluence measurements which properly corrects
for the redshifting of GRB spectra. Here, we develop a methodology to
``k-correct'' the implied prompt energy release of a GRB to a fixed co-moving
bandpass. This allows us to homogenize the prompt energy release of 17
cosmological GRBs (using published redshifts, fluences, and spectra) to two
common co-moving bandpasses: 20-2000 keV and 0.1 keV-10 MeV (``bolometric'').
While the overall distribution of GRB energy releases does not change
significantly by using a k-correction, we show that uncorrected energy
estimates systematically undercounts the bolometric energy by ~5% to 600%,
depending on the particular GRB. We find that the median bolometric
isotropic-equivalent prompt energy release is 2.2 x 10^{53} erg with an r.m.s.
scatter of 0.80 dex. The typical estimated uncertainty on a given k-corrected
energy measurement is ~20%.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal. 21 pages (LaTeX) and 4 figure
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