3,726 research outputs found
Holographic Superconductors from Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton Gravity
We construct holographic superconductors from Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton
gravity in 3+1 dimensions with two adjustable couplings and the charge
carried by the scalar field. For the values of and we
consider, there is always a critical temperature at which a second order phase
transition occurs between a hairy black hole and the AdS RN black hole in the
canonical ensemble, which can be identified with the superconducting phase
transition of the dual field theory. We calculate the electric conductivity of
the dual superconductor and find that for the values of and where
is small the dual superconductor has similar properties to the
minimal model, while for the values of and where is
large enough, the electric conductivity of the dual superconductor exhibits
novel properties at low frequencies where it shows a "Drude Peak" in the real
part of the conductivity.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures; v2, typos corrected; v3, refs added, to appear
in JHE
Low temperature properties of holographic condensates
In the current work we study various models of holographic superconductors at
low temperature. Generically the zero temperature limit of those models are
solitonic solution with a zero sized horizon. Here we generalized simple
version of those zero temperature solutions to small but non-zero temperature
T. We confine ourselves to cases where near horizon geometry is AdS^4. At a
non-zero temperature a small horizon would form deep inside this AdS^4 which
does not disturb the UV physics. The resulting geometry may be matched with the
zero temperature solution at an intermediate length scale. We understand this
matching from separation of scales by setting up a perturbative expansion in
gauge potential. We have a better analytic control in abelian case and
quantities may be expressed in terms of hypergeometric function. From this we
calculate low temperature behavior of various quatities like entropy, charge
density and specific heat etc. We also calculate various energy gaps associated
with p-wave holographic superconductor to understand the underlying pairing
mechanism. The result deviates significantly from the corresponding weak
coupling BCS counterpart.Comment: 17 Page
Fermion correlators in non-abelian holographic superconductors
We consider fermion correlators in non-abelian holographic superconductors.
The spectral function of the fermions exhibits several interesting features
such as support in displaced Dirac cones and an asymmetric distribution of
normal modes. These features are compared to similar ones observed in angle
resolved photoemission experiments on high T_c superconductors. Along the way
we elucidate some properties of p-wave superconductors in AdS_4 and discuss the
construction of SO(4) superconductors.Comment: 49 pages, 11 figure
On the flexibility of the design of Multiple Try Metropolis schemes
The Multiple Try Metropolis (MTM) method is a generalization of the classical
Metropolis-Hastings algorithm in which the next state of the chain is chosen
among a set of samples, according to normalized weights. In the literature,
several extensions have been proposed. In this work, we show and remark upon
the flexibility of the design of MTM-type methods, fulfilling the detailed
balance condition. We discuss several possibilities and show different
numerical results
Mesoscopic structure conditions the emergence of cooperation on social networks
We study the evolutionary Prisoner's Dilemma on two social networks obtained
from actual relational data. We find very different cooperation levels on each
of them that can not be easily understood in terms of global statistical
properties of both networks. We claim that the result can be understood at the
mesoscopic scale, by studying the community structure of the networks. We
explain the dependence of the cooperation level on the temptation parameter in
terms of the internal structure of the communities and their interconnections.
We then test our results on community-structured, specifically designed
artificial networks, finding perfect agreement with the observations in the
real networks. Our results support the conclusion that studies of evolutionary
games on model networks and their interpretation in terms of global properties
may not be sufficient to study specific, real social systems. In addition, the
community perspective may be helpful to interpret the origin and behavior of
existing networks as well as to design structures that show resilient
cooperative behavior.Comment: Largely improved version, includes an artificial network model that
fully confirms the explanation of the results in terms of inter- and
intra-community structur
Thermodynamics of Holographic Defects
Using the AdS/CFT correspondence, we study the thermodynamic properties and
the phase diagram of matter fields on (2+1)-dimensional defects coupled to a
(3+1)-dimensional N=4 SYM "heat bath". Considering a background magnetic field,
(net) quark density, defect "magnitude" and the mass of the
matter, we study the defect contribution to the thermodynamic potentials and
their first and second derivatives to map the phases and study their physical
properties.
We find some features that are qualitatively similar to other systems e.g. in
(3+1) dimensions and a number of features that are particular to the defect
nature, such as its magnetic properties, unexpected properties at T->0 and
finite density; and the finite effects, e.g. a diverging
susceptibility and vanishing density of states at small temperatures, a
physically consistent negative heat capacity and new types of consistent
phases.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures (jpg and pdf), typos fixed and references added,
final version published in JHE
Ethanol reversal of tolerance to the respiratory depressant effects of morphine
Opioids are the most common drugs associated with unintentional drug overdose. Death results from respiratory depression. Prolonged use of opioids results in the development of tolerance but the degree of tolerance is thought to vary between different effects of the drugs. Many opioid addicts regularly consume alcohol (ethanol), and post-mortem analyses of opioid overdose deaths have revealed an inverse correlation between blood morphine and ethanol levels. In the present study, we determined whether ethanol reduced tolerance to the respiratory depressant effects of opioids. Mice were treated with opioids (morphine, methadone, or buprenorphine) for up to 6 days. Respiration was measured in freely moving animals breathing 5% CO(2) in air in plethysmograph chambers. Antinociception (analgesia) was measured as the latency to remove the tail from a thermal stimulus. Opioid tolerance was assessed by measuring the response to a challenge dose of morphine (10 mg/kg i.p.). Tolerance developed to the respiratory depressant effect of morphine but at a slower rate than tolerance to its antinociceptive effect. A low dose of ethanol (0.3 mg/kg) alone did not depress respiration but in prolonged morphine-treated animals respiratory depression was observed when ethanol was co-administered with the morphine challenge. Ethanol did not alter the brain levels of morphine. In contrast, in methadone- or buprenorphine-treated animals no respiratory depression was observed when ethanol was co-administered along with the morphine challenge. As heroin is converted to morphine in man, selective reversal of morphine tolerance by ethanol may be a contributory factor in heroin overdose deaths
Photoemission "experiments" on holographic superconductors
We study the effects of a superconducting condensate on holographic Fermi
surfaces. With a suitable coupling between the fermion and the condensate,
there are stable quasiparticles with a gap. We find some similarities with the
phenomenology of the cuprates: in systems whose normal state is a non-Fermi
liquid with no stable quasiparticles, a stable quasiparticle peak appears in
the condensed phase.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures; v2: typos corrected and some clarification
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Emergent Gauge Fields in Holographic Superconductors
Holographic superconductors have been studied so far in the absence of
dynamical electromagnetic fields, namely in the limit in which they coincide
with holographic superfluids. It is possible, however, to introduce dynamical
gauge fields if a Neumann-type boundary condition is imposed on the
AdS-boundary. In 3+1 dimensions, the dual theory is a 2+1 dimensional CFT whose
spectrum contains a massless gauge field, signaling the emergence of a gauge
symmetry. We study the impact of a dynamical gauge field in vortex
configurations where it is known to significantly affect the energetics and
phase transitions. We calculate the critical magnetic fields H_c1 and H_c2,
obtaining that holographic superconductors are of Type II (H_c1 < H_c2). We
extend the study to 4+1 dimensions where the gauge field does not appear as an
emergent phenomena, but can be introduced, by a proper renormalization, as an
external dynamical field. We also compare our predictions with those arising
from a Ginzburg-Landau theory and identify the generic properties of Abrikosov
vortices in holographic models.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, few comments added, version published in JHE
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