446 research outputs found

    Equilibrium Properties of Quantum Spin Systems with Non-additive Long-Range Interactions

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    We study equilibrium states of quantum spin systems with non-additive long-range interactions by adopting an appropriate scaling of the interaction strength, i.e., the so called Kac prescription. In classical spin systems, it is known that the equilibrium free energy is obtained by minimizing the free energy functional over the coarse-grained magnetization. Here we show that it is also true for quantum spin systems. From this observation, it is found that when the canonical ensemble and the microcanonical ensemble are not equivalent in some parameter region, it is not necessarily justified to replace the actual long-range interaction by the infinite-range interaction (Curie-Weiss type interaction). On the other hand, in the parameter region where the two ensembles are equivalent, this replacement is always justified. We examine the Heisenberg XXZ model as an illustrative example, and discuss the relation to experiments.Comment: 13 pages, two columns; to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Effect of defects on thermal denaturation of DNA Oligomers

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    The effect of defects on the melting profile of short heterogeneous DNA chains are calculated using the Peyrard-Bishop Hamiltonian. The on-site potential on a defect site is represented by a potential which has only the short-range repulsion and the flat part without well of the Morse potential. The stacking energy between the two neigbouring pairs involving a defect site is also modified. The results are found to be in good agreement with the experiments.Comment: 11 pages including 5 postscript figure; To be appear in Phys. Rev.

    Statistical mechanics and dynamics of solvable models with long-range interactions

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    The two-body potential of systems with long-range interactions decays at large distances as V(r)1/rαV(r)\sim 1/r^\alpha, with αd\alpha\leq d, where dd is the space dimension. Examples are: gravitational systems, two-dimensional hydrodynamics, two-dimensional elasticity, charged and dipolar systems. Although such systems can be made extensive, they are intrinsically non additive. Moreover, the space of accessible macroscopic thermodynamic parameters might be non convex. The violation of these two basic properties is at the origin of ensemble inequivalence, which implies that specific heat can be negative in the microcanonical ensemble and temperature jumps can appear at microcanonical first order phase transitions. The lack of convexity implies that ergodicity may be generically broken. We present here a comprehensive review of the recent advances on the statistical mechanics and out-of-equilibrium dynamics of systems with long-range interactions. The core of the review consists in the detailed presentation of the concept of ensemble inequivalence, as exemplified by the exact solution, in the microcanonical and canonical ensembles, of mean-field type models. Relaxation towards thermodynamic equilibrium can be extremely slow and quasi-stationary states may be present. The understanding of such unusual relaxation process is obtained by the introduction of an appropriate kinetic theory based on the Vlasov equation.Comment: 118 pages, review paper, added references, slight change of conten

    Aging phenomena in nonlinear dissipative chains: Application to polymer

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    We study energy relaxation in a phenomenological model for polymer built from rheological considerations: a one dimensional nonlinear lattice with dissipative couplings. These couplings are well known in polymer's community to be possibly responsible of beta-relaxation (as in Burger's model). After thermalisation of this system, the extremities of the chain are put in contact with a zero-temperature reservoir, showing the existence of surprising quasi-stationary states with non zero energy when the dissipative coupling is high. This strange behavior, due to long-lived nonlinear localized modes, induces stretched exponential laws. Furthermore, we observe a strong dependence on the waiting time tw after the quench of the two-time intermediate correlation function C(tw+t,tw). This function can be scaled onto a master curve, similar to the case of spin or Lennard-Jones glasses.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure

    Stability criteria of the Vlasov equation and quasi-stationary states of the HMF model

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    We perform a detailed study of the relaxation towards equilibrium in the Hamiltonian Mean-Field (HMF) model, a prototype for long-range interactions in NN-particle dynamics. In particular, we point out the role played by the infinity of stationary states of the associated N N ~ Vlasov dynamics. In this context, we derive a new general criterion for the stability of any spatially homogeneous distribution, and compare its analytical predictions with numerical simulations of the Hamiltonian, finite NN, dynamics. We then propose and verify numerically a scenario for the relaxation process, relying on the Vlasov equation. When starting from a non stationary or a Vlasov unstable stationary initial state, the system shows initially a rapid convergence towards a stable stationary state of the Vlasov equation via non stationary states: we characterize numerically this dynamical instability in the finite NN system by introducing appropriate indicators. This first step of the evolution towards Boltzmann-Gibbs equilibrium is followed by a slow quasi-stationary process, that proceeds through different stable stationary states of the Vlasov equation. If the finite NN system is initialized in a Vlasov stable homogenous state, it remains trapped in a quasi-stationary state for times that increase with the nontrivial power law N1.7N^{1.7}. Single particle momentum distributions in such a quasi-stationary regime do not have power-law tails, and hence cannot be fitted by the qq-exponential distributions derived from Tsallis statistics.Comment: To appear in Physica

    Hamiltonian dynamics reveals the existence of quasi-stationary states for long-range systems in contact with a reservoir

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    We introduce a Hamiltonian dynamics for the description of long-range interacting systems in contact with a thermal bath (i.e., in the canonical ensemble). The dynamics confirms statistical mechanics equilibrium predictions for the Hamiltonian Mean Field model and the equilibrium ensemble equivalence. We find that long-lasting quasi-stationary states persist in presence of the interaction with the environment. Our results indicate that quasi-stationary states are indeed reproducible in real physical experiments.Comment: Title changed, throughout revision of the tex

    Enhancement of magnetic anisotropy barrier in long range interacting spin systems

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    Magnetic materials are usually characterized by anisotropy energy barriers which dictate the time scale of the magnetization decay and consequently the magnetic stability of the sample. Here we present a unified description, which includes coherent rotation and nucleation, for the magnetization decay in generic anisotropic spin systems. In particular, we show that, in presence of long range exchange interaction, the anisotropy energy barrier grows as the volume of the particle for on site anisotropy, while it grows even faster than the volume for exchange anisotropy, with an anisotropy energy barrier proportional to V2α/dV^{2-\alpha/d}, where VV is the particle volume, αd\alpha \leq d is the range of interaction and dd is the embedding dimension. These results shows a relevant enhancement of the anisotropy energy barrier w.r.t. the short range case, where the anisotropy energy barrier grows as the particle cross sectional area for large particle size or large particle aspect ratio.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Theory of Magnetic decay in nanosystem. Non equilibrium statistical mechanics of many body system
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