6,950 research outputs found
Control of the finite size corrections in exact diagonalization studies
We study the possibility of controlling the finite size corrections in exact
diagonalization studies quantitatively. We consider the one- and two
dimensional Hubbard model. We show that the finite-size corrections can be be
reduced systematically by a grand-canonical integration over boundary
conditions. We find, in general, an improvement of one order of magnitude with
respect to studies with periodic boundary conditions only. We present results
for ground-state properties of the 2D Hubbard model and an evaluation of the
specific heat for the 1D and 2D Hubbard model.Comment: Phys. Rev. B (Brief Report), in pres
A Monte Carlo Method for Fermion Systems Coupled with Classical Degrees of Freedom
A new Monte Carlo method is proposed for fermion systems interacting with
classical degrees of freedom. To obtain a weight for each Monte Carlo sample
with a fixed configuration of classical variables, the moment expansion of the
density of states by Chebyshev polynomials is applied instead of the direct
diagonalization of the fermion Hamiltonian. This reduces a cpu time to scale as
compared to for the
diagonalization in the conventional technique; is the dimension
of the Hamiltonian. Another advantage of this method is that parallel
computation with high efficiency is possible. These significantly save total
cpu times of Monte Carlo calculations because the calculation of a Monte Carlo
weight is the bottleneck part. The method is applied to the double-exchange
model as an example. The benchmark results show that it is possible to make a
systematic investigation using a system-size scaling even in three dimensions
within a realistic cpu timescale.Comment: 6 pages including 4 figure
Spin-excitation spectra and resistance minima in amorphous ferromagnetic alloys
Resistance minima have been found in recent years to occur in amorphous ferromagnetic alloys below the magnetic ordering temperature. Although a well-developed theory exists for resistance minima in very dilute alloys, the meaning of the phenomena has remained in question for alloys in which the neglect of spin-spin interactions is not justifiable. In this paper it is shown that the observation of resistance minima implies that these alloys have a finite density of near zero frequency excitations. Specifically, the theory of inverse transport coefficients, reformulated in terms of linear response, is used to derive a general expression for the resistivity due to the conduction-electron-spin interaction. Expanding perturbatively, the nth-order contribution is determined by an nth-order spin correlation function. To third order it is shown that the coefficient of the lnk T term responsible for the resistance anomaly according to the accepted Kondo theory receives contributions in the low-temperature limit only from those parts of the spin correlation functions which have frequencies less than k TK /ℏ where TK is the Kondo temperature
Calculation of Densities of States and Spectral Functions by Chebyshev Recursion and Maximum Entropy
We present an efficient algorithm for calculating spectral properties of
large sparse Hamiltonian matrices such as densities of states and spectral
functions. The combination of Chebyshev recursion and maximum entropy achieves
high energy resolution without significant roundoff error, machine precision or
numerical instability limitations. If controlled statistical or systematic
errors are acceptable, cpu and memory requirements scale linearly in the number
of states. The inference of spectral properties from moments is much better
conditioned for Chebyshev moments than for power moments. We adapt concepts
from the kernel polynomial approximation, a linear Chebyshev approximation with
optimized Gibbs damping, to control the accuracy of Fourier integrals of
positive non-analytic functions. We compare the performance of kernel
polynomial and maximum entropy algorithms for an electronic structure example.Comment: 8 pages RevTex, 3 postscript figure
Competition Between Antiferromagnetic Order and Spin-Liquid Behavior in the Two-Dimensional Periodic Anderson Model at Half-Filling
We study the two-dimensional periodic Anderson model at half-filling using
quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) techniques. The ground state undergoes a magnetic
order-disorder transition as a function of the effective exchange coupling
between the conduction and localized bands. Low-lying spin and charge
excitations are determined using the maximum entropy method to analytically
continue the QMC data. At finite temperature we find a competition between the
Kondo effect and antiferromagnetic order which develops in the localized band
through Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interactions.Comment: Revtex 3.0, 10 pages + 5 figures, UCSBTH-94-2
Formation and decay of electron-hole droplets in diamond
We study the formation and decay of electron-hole droplets in diamonds at
both low and high temperatures under different excitations by master equations.
The calculation reveals that at low temperature the kinetics of the system
behaves as in direct-gap semiconductors, whereas at high temperature it shows
metastability as in traditional indirect-gap semiconductors. Our results at low
temperature are consistent with the experimental findings by Nagai {\em et al.}
[Phys. Rev. B {\bf 68}, 081202 (R) (2003)]. The kinetics of the e-h system in
diamonds at high temperature under both low and high excitations is also
predicted.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, revised with some modifications in physics
discussion, to be published in PR
Order N Monte Carlo Algorithm for Fermion Systems Coupled with Fluctuating Adiabatical Fields
An improved algorithm is proposed for Monte Carlo methods to study fermion
systems interacting with adiabatical fields. To obtain a weight for each Monte
Carlo sample with a fixed configuration of adiabatical fields, a series
expansion using Chebyshev polynomials is applied. By introducing truncations of
matrix operations in a systematic and controlled way, it is shown that the cpu
time is reduced from O(N^3) to O(N) where N is the system size. Benchmark
results show that the implementation of the algorithm makes it possible to
perform systematic investigations of critical phenomena using system-size
scalings even for an electronic model in three dimensions, within a realistic
cpu timescale.Comment: 9 pages with 4 fig
Description of recent large- neutron inclusive scattering data from liquid He
We report dynamical calculations for large- structure functions of liquid
He at =1.6 and 2.3 K and compare those with recent MARI data. We extend
those calculations far beyond the experimental range q\le 29\Ain in order to
study the approach of the response to its asymptotic limit for a system with
interactions having a strong short-range repulsion. We find only small
deviations from theoretical behavior, valid for smooth . We repeat an
extraction by Glyde et al of cumulant coefficients from data. We argue that
fits determine the single atom momentum distribution, but express doubt as to
the extraction of meaningful Final State Interaction parameters.Comment: 37 pages, 13 postscript fig
Fast algorithm for calculating two-photon absorption spectra
We report a numerical calculation of the two-photon absorption coefficient of
electrons in a binding potential using the real-time real-space higher-order
difference method. By introducing random vector averaging for the intermediate
state, the task of evaluating the two-dimensional time integral is reduced to
calculating two one-dimensional integrals. This allows the reduction of the
computation load down to the same order as that for the linear response
function. The relative advantage of the method compared to the straightforward
multi-dimensional time integration is greater for the calculation of non-linear
response functions of higher order at higher energy resolution.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. It will be published in Phys. Rev. E on 1, March,
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