5,510 research outputs found
Ground-state fidelity of Luttinger liquids: A wave functional approach
We use a wave functional approach to calculate the fidelity of ground states
in the Luttinger liquid universality class of one-dimensional gapless quantum
many-body systems. The ground-state wave functionals are discussed using both
the Schrodinger (functional differential equation) formulation and a path
integral formulation. The fidelity between Luttinger liquids with Luttinger
parameters K and K' is found to decay exponentially with system size, and to
obey the symmetry F(K,K')=F(1/K,1/K') as a consequence of a duality in the
bosonization description of Luttinger liquids.Comment: 13 pages, IOP single-column format. Sec. 3 expanded with discussion
of short-distance cut-off. Some typos corrected. Ref. 44 in v2 is now
footnote 2 (moved by copy editor). Published versio
NMR Search for the Spin Nematic State in LaFeAsO Single Crystal
We report a 75-As single crystal NMR investigation of LaFeAsO, the parent
phase of a pnictide high Tc superconductor. We demonstrate that spin dynamics
develop a strong two-fold anisotropy within each orthorhombic domain below the
tetragonal-orthorhombic structural phase transition at T[TO]~156 K. This
intermediate state with a dynamical breaking of the rotational symmetry freezes
progressively into a spin density wave (SDW) below T[SDW]~142 K. Our findings
are consistent with the presence of a spin nematic state below T[TO] with an
incipient magnetic order.Comment: Revised manuscript accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Phase diagram of a Bose-Fermi mixture in a one-dimensional optical lattice in terms of fidelity and entanglement
We study the ground-state phase diagram of a Bose-Fermi mixture loaded in a
one-dimensional optical lattice by computing the ground-state fidelity and
quantum entanglement. We find that the fidelity is able to signal quantum phase
transitions between the Luttinger liquid phase, the density-wave phase, and the
phase separation state of the system; and the concurrence can be used to signal
the transition between the density-wave phase and the Ising phase.Comment: 4 pages 3 figure
Non-damping oscillations at flaring loops
Context. QPPs are usually detected as spatial displacements of coronal loops
in imaging observations or as periodic shifts of line properties in
spectroscopic observations. They are often applied for remote diagnostics of
magnetic fields and plasma properties on the Sun. Aims. We combine imaging and
spectroscopic measurements of available space missions, and investigate the
properties of non-damping oscillations at flaring loops. Methods. We used the
IRIS to measure the spectrum over a narrow slit. The double-component Gaussian
fitting method was used to extract the line profile of Fe XXI 1354.08 A at "O
I" window. The quasi-periodicity of loop oscillations were identified in the
Fourier and wavelet spectra. Results. A periodicity at about 40 s is detected
in the line properties of Fe XXI, HXR emissions in GOES 1-8 A derivative, and
Fermi 26-50 keV. The Doppler velocity and line width oscillate in phase, while
a phase shift of about Pi/2 is detected between the Doppler velocity and peak
intensity. The amplitudes of Doppler velocity and line width oscillation are
about 2.2 km/s and 1.9 km/s, respectively, while peak intensity oscillate with
amplitude at about 3.6% of the background emission. Meanwhile, a quasi-period
of about 155 s is identified in the Doppler velocity and peak intensity of Fe
XXI, and AIA 131 A intensity. Conclusions. The oscillations at about 40 s are
not damped significantly during the observation, it might be linked to the
global kink modes of flaring loops. The periodicity at about 155 s is most
likely a signature of recurring downflows after chromospheric evaporation along
flaring loops. The magnetic field strengths of the flaring loops are estimated
to be about 120-170 G using the MHD seismology diagnostics, which are
consistent with the magnetic field modeling results using the flux rope
insertion method.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted by A&
Multiwavelength observations of a partially eruptive filament on 2011 September 8
In this paper, we report our multiwavelength observations of a partial
filament eruption event in NOAA active region 11283 on 2011 September 8. A
magnetic null point and the corresponding spine and separatrix surface are
found in the active region. Beneath the null point, a sheared arcade supports
the filament along the highly complex and fragmented polarity inversion line.
After being activated, the sigmoidal filament erupted and split into two parts.
The major part rose at the speeds of 90150 km s before reaching the
maximum apparent height of 115 Mm. Afterwards, it returned to the solar
surface in a bumpy way at the speeds of 2080 km s. The rising and
falling motions were clearly observed in the extreme-ultravoilet (EUV), UV, and
H wavelengths. The failed eruption of the main part was associated with
an M6.7 flare with a single hard X-ray source. The runaway part of the
filament, however, separated from and rotated around the major part for 1
turn at the eastern leg before escaping from the corona, probably along
large-scale open magnetic field lines. The ejection of the runaway part
resulted in a very faint coronal mass ejection (CME) that propagated at an
apparent speed of 214 km s in the outer corona. The filament eruption
also triggered transverse kink-mode oscillation of the adjacent coronal loops
in the same AR. The amplitude and period of the oscillation were 1.6 Mm and 225
s. Our results are important for understanding the mechanisms of partial
filament eruptions and provide new constraints to theoretical models. The
multiwavelength observations also shed light on space weather prediction.Comment: 46 pages, 17 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
Electronic structures of [001]- and [111]-oriented InSb and GaSb free-standing nanowires
We report on a theoretical study of the electronic structures of InSb and
GaSb nanowires oriented along the [001] and [111] crystallographic directions.
The nanowires are described by atomistic, spin-orbit inteaction included,
tight-binding models, and the band structures and the wave functions of the
nanowires are calculated by means of a Lanczos iteration algorithm. For the
[001]-oriented InSb and GaSb nanowires, the systems with both square and
rectangular cross sections are considered. Here, it is found that all the
energy bands are double degenerate. Furthermore, although the lowest conduction
bands in these nanowires show good parabolic dispersions, the top valence bands
show rich and complex structures. In particular, the topmost valence bands of
these nanowires with a square cross section show a double maximum structure. In
the nanowires with a rectangular cross section, this double maximum structure
is suppressed and top valence bands gradually develop into parabolic bands as
the aspect ratio of the cross section is increased. For the [111]-oriented InSb
and GaSb nanowires, the systems with hexagonal cross sections are considered.
It is found that all the bands at the \Gamma-point are again double degenerate.
However, some of them will split into non-degenerate bands when the wave vector
moves away from the \Gamma-point. Furthermore, although the lowest conduction
bands again show good parabolic dispersions, the topmost valence bands do not
show the double maximum structure but, instead, a single maximum structure with
its maximum at a wave vector slightly away from the \Gamma-point. We also
investigate the effects of quantum confinement on the band structures of the
[001]- and [111]-oriented InSb and GaSb nanowires and present an empirical
formula for the description of quantization energies of the band edge states in
the nanowires.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figure
Liquid-like thermal conduction in a crystalline solid
A solid conducts heat through both transverse and longitudinal acoustic
phonons, but a liquid employs only longitudinal vibrations. Here, we report
that the crystalline solid AgCrSe2 has liquid-like thermal conduction. In this
compound, Ag atoms exhibit a dynamic duality that they are exclusively involved
in intense low-lying transverse acoustic phonons while they also undergo local
fluctuations inherent in an order-to-disorder transition occurring at 450 K. As
a consequence of this extreme disorder-phonon coupling, transverse acoustic
phonons become damped as approaching the transition temperature, above which
they are not defined anymore because their lifetime is shorter than the
relaxation time of local fluctuations. Nevertheless, the damped longitudinal
acoustic phonon survives for thermal transport. This microscopic insight might
reshape the fundamental idea on thermal transport properties of matter and
facilitates the optimization of thermoelectrics.Comment: four figures, supplemental informatio
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