264,624 research outputs found
Giant Tunneling Magnetoresistance, Glassiness, and the Energy Landscape at Nanoscale Cluster Coexistence
We present microscopic results on the giant tunneling magnetoresistance that
arises from the nanoscale coexistence of ferromagnetic metallic (FMM) and
antiferromagnetic insulating (AFI) clusters in a disordered two dimensional
electron system with competing double exchange and superexchange interactions.
Our Monte Carlo study allows us to map out the different field regimes in
magnetotransport and correlate it with the evolution of spatial structures. At
coexistence, the isotropic O(3) model shows signs of slow relaxation, and has a
high density of low energy metastable states, but no genuine glassiness.
However, in the presence of weak magnetic anisotropy, and below a field
dependent irreversibility temperature , the response on field cooling
(FC) differs distinctly from that on zero field cooling (ZFC). We map out the
phase diagram of this `phase coexistence glass', highlight how its response
differs from that of a standard spin glass, and compare our results with data
on the manganites.Comment: Final published versio
Can re-entrance be observed in force induced transitions?
A large conformational change in the reaction co-ordinate and the role of the
solvent in the formation of base-pairing are combined to settle a long standing
issue {\it i.e.} prediction of re-entrance in the force induced transition of
DNA. A direct way to observe the re-entrance, i.e a strand goes to the closed
state from the open state and again to the open state with temperature, appears
difficult to be achieved in the laboratory. An experimental protocol (in direct
way) in the constant force ensemble is being proposed for the first time that
will enable the observation of the re-entrance behavior in the
force-temperature plane. Our exact results for small oligonucleotide that forms
a hairpin structure provide the evidence that re-entrance can be observed.Comment: 12 pages and 5 figures (RevTex4). Accepted in Europhys Lett. (2009
Quantum entanglement and Hawking temperature
The thermodynamic entropy of an isolated system is given by its von Neumann
entropy. Over the last few years, there is an intense activity to understand
thermodynamic entropy from the principles of quantum mechanics. More
specifically, is there a relation between the (von Neumann) entropy of
entanglement between a system and some (separate) environment is related to the
thermodynamic entropy? It is difficult to obtain the relation for many body
systems, hence, most of the work in the literature has focused on small number
systems. In this work, we consider black-holes --- that are simple yet
macroscopic systems --- and show that a direct connection could not be made
between the entropy of entanglement and the Hawking temperature. In this work,
within the adiabatic approximation, we explicitly show that the Hawking
temperature is indeed given by the rate of change of the entropy of
entanglement across a black hole's horizon with regard to the system energy.
This is yet another numerical evidence to understand the key features of black
hole thermodynamics from the viewpoint of quantum information theory.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures (To appear in Eur. Phys. J. C
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