5,213 research outputs found
Stripe Formation in Fermionic Atoms on 2-D Optical Lattice inside a Box Trap: DMRG Studies for Repulsive Hubbard Model with Open Boundary Condition
We suggest that box shape trap enables to observe intrinsic properties of the
repulsive Hubbard model in a fixed doping in contrast to the harmonic trap
bringing about spatial variations of atom density profiles. In order to predict
atomic density profile under the box trap, we apply the directly-extended
density-matrix renormalization group method to 4-leg repulsive Hubbard model
with the open boundary condition. Consequently, we find that stripe formation
is universal in a low hole doping range and the stripe sensitively changes its
structure with variations of and the doping rate. A remarkable change is
that a stripe formed by a hole pair turns to one by a bi-hole pair when
entering a limited strong range. Furthermore, a systematic calculation
reveals that the Hubbard model shows a change from the stripe to the Friedel
like oscillation with increasing the doping rate
Direct Imaging of Spatially Modulated Superfluid Phases in Atomic Fermion Systems
It is proposed that the spatially modulated superfluid phase, or the
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) state could be observed in resonant
Fermion atomic condensates which are realized recently. We examine optimal
experimental setups to achieve it by solving Bogoliubov-de Gennes equation both
for idealized one-dimensional and realistic three-dimensional cases. The
spontaneous modulation of this superfluid is shown to be directly imaged as the
density profiles either by optical absorption or by Stern-Gerlach experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Thermal Equilibria of Optically Thin, Magnetically Supported, Two-Temperature, Black Hole Accretion Disks
We obtained thermal equilibrium solutions for optically thin, two-temperature
black hole accretion disks incorporating magnetic fields. The main objective of
this study is to explain the bright/hard state observed during the bright/slow
transition of galactic black hole candidates. We assume that the energy
transfer from ions to electrons occurs via Coulomb collisions. Bremsstrahlung,
synchrotron, and inverse Compton scattering are considered as the radiative
cooling processes. In order to complete the set of basic equations, we specify
the magnetic flux advection rate. We find magnetically supported (low-beta),
thermally stable solutions. In these solutions, the total amount of the heating
via the dissipation of turbulent magnetic fields goes into electrons and
balances the radiative cooling. The low- solutions extend to high mass
accretion rates and the electron temperature is moderately cool. High
luminosities and moderately high energy cutoffs in the X-ray spectrum observed
in the bright/hard state can be explained by the low-beta solutions.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures,accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
Voltage-biased I-V characteristics in the multi-Josephson junction model of high T superconductor
By use of the multi-Josephson junction model, we investigate voltage-biased
I-V characteristics. Differently from the case of the single junction, I-V
characteristics show a complicated behavior due to inter-layer couplings among
superconducting phase differences mediated by the charging effect. We show that
there exist three characteristic regions, which are identified by jumps and
cusps in the I-V curve. In the low voltage region, the total current is
periodic with trigonometric functional increases and rapid drops. Then a kind
of chaotic region is followed. Above certain voltage, the total current behaves
with a simple harmonic oscillation and the I-V characteristics form a
multi-branch structure as in the current-biased case. The above behavior is the
result of the inter-layer coupling, and may be used to confirm the inter-layer
coupling mechanism of the formation of hysteresis branches.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 4 figure
Bernoulli potential in type-I and weak type-II superconductors: III. Electrostatic potential above the vortex lattice
The electrostatic potential above the Abrikosov vortex lattice, discussed
earlier by Blatter {\em et al.} {[}PRL {\bf 77}, 566 (1996){]}, is evaluated
within the Ginzburg-Landau theory. Unlike previous studies we include the
surface dipole. Close to the critical temperature, the surface dipole reduces
the electrostatic potential to values below a sensitivity of recent sensors. At
low temperatures the surface dipole is less effective and the electrostatic
potential remains observable as predicted earlier.Comment: 8 pages 5 figure
- …
