694 research outputs found
Beats of the Magnetocapacitance Oscillations in Lateral Semiconductor Superlattices
We present calculations on the magnetocapacitance of the two-dimensional
electron gas in a lateral semiconductor superlattice under two-dimensional weak
periodic potential modulation in the presence of a perpendicular magnetic
field. Adopting a Gaussian broadening of magnetic-field-dependent width in the
density of states, we present explicit and simple expressions for the
magnetocapacitance, valid for the relevant weak magnetic fields and modulation
strengths. As the modulation strength in both directions increase, beats of the
magnetocapacitance oscillations are observed, in the low magnetic field range
(Weiss-oscillations regime), which are absent in the one-dimensional weak
modulation case.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Mod. Phys. Lett. B (March 2007
Thermodynamics of Rotating Black Branes in Gauss-Bonnet-Born-Infeld Gravity
Considering both the Gauss-Bonnet and the Born-Infeld terms, which are on
similar footing with regard to string corrections on the gravity side and
electrodynamic side, we present a new class of rotating solutions in
Gauss-Bonnet gravity with rotation parameters in the presence of a
nonlinear electromagnetic field. These solutions, which are asymptotically
anti-de Sitter in the presence of cosmological constant, may be interpreted as
black brane solutions with inner and outer event horizons, an extreme black
brane or naked singularity provided the metric parameters are chosen suitably.
We calculate the finite action and conserved quantities of the solutions by
using the counterterm method, and find that these quantities do not depend on
the Gauss-Bonnet parameter. We also compute the temperature, the angular
velocities, the electric charge and the electric potential. Then, we calculate
the entropy of the black brane through the use of Gibbs-Duhem relation and show
that it obeys the area law of entropy. We obtain a Smarr-type formula for the
mass as a function of the entropy, the angular momenta and the charge, and show
that the conserved and thermodynamic quantities satisfy the first law of
thermodynamics. Finally, we perform a stability analysis in both the canonical
and grand-canonical ensemble and show that the presence of a nonlinear
electromagnetic field has no effect on the stability of the black branes, and
they are stable in the whole phase space.Comment: 17 pages, one figur
Local dissipation effects in two-dimensional quantum Josephson junction arrays with magnetic field
We study the quantum phase transitions in two-dimensional arrays of
Josephson-couples junctions with short range Josephson couplings (given by the
Josephson energy) and the charging energy. We map the problem onto the solvable
quantum generalization of the spherical model that improves over the mean-field
theory method. The arrays are placed on the top of a two-dimensional electron
gas separated by an insulator. We include effects of the local dissipation in
the presence of an external magnetic flux f in square lattice for several
rational fluxes f=0,1/2,1/3,1/4 and 1/6. We also have examined the T=0
superconducting-insulator phase boundary as function of a dissipation alpha for
two different geometry of the lattice: square and triangular. We have found
critical value of the dissipation parameter independent on geometry of the
lattice and presence magnetic field.Comment: accepted to PR
Nexus between quantum criticality and the chemical potential pinning in high- cuprates
For strongly correlated electrons the relation between total number of charge
carriers and the chemical potential reveals for large Coulomb
energy the apparently paradoxical pinning of within the Mott gap, as
observed in high- cuprates. By unravelling consequences of the non-trivial
topology of the charge gauge U(1) group and the associated ground state
degeneracy we found a close kinship between the pinning of and the
zero-temperature divergence of the charge compressibility , which marks a novel quantum criticality governed by
topological charges rather than Landau principle of the symmetry breaking.Comment: 4+ pages, 2 figures, typos corrected, version as publishe
Finite-temperature effects on the superfluid Bose-Einstein condensation of confined ultracold atoms in three-dimensional optical lattices
We discuss the finite-temperature phase diagram in the three-dimensional
Bose-Hubbard (BH) model in the strong correlation regime, relevant for
Bose-Einstein condensates in optical lattices, by employing a quantum rotor
approach. In systems with strong on site repulsive interactions, the rotor U(1)
phase variable dual to the local boson density emerges as an important
collective field. After establishing the connection between the rotor
construction and the the on--site interaction in the BH model the robust
effective action formalism is developed which allows us to study the superfluid
phase transition in various temperature--interaction regimes
Electromagnetic Magic: The Relativistically Rotating Disk
A closed form analytic solution is found for the electromagnetic field of the
charged uniformly rotating conducting disk for all values of the tip speed
up to . For it becomes the Magic field of the Kerr-Newman black hole
with set to zero.
The field energy, field angular momentum and gyromagnetic ratio are
calculated and compared with those of the electron.
A new mathematical expression that sums products of 3 Legendre functions each
of a different argument, is demonstrated.Comment: 10 pages, one figur
Divergence of the Chaotic Layer Width and Strong Acceleration of the Spatial Chaotic Transport in Periodic Systems Driven by an Adiabatic ac Force
We show for the first time that a {\it weak} perturbation in a Hamiltonian
system may lead to an arbitrarily {\it wide} chaotic layer and {\it fast}
chaotic transport. This {\it generic} effect occurs in any spatially periodic
Hamiltonian system subject to a sufficiently slow ac force. We explain it and
develop an explicit theory for the layer width, verified in simulations.
Chaotic spatial transport as well as applications to the diffusion of particles
on surfaces, threshold devices and others are discussed.Comment: 4 pages including 3 EPS figures, this is an improved version of the
paper (accepted to PRL, 2005
Level rearrangement in exotic atoms and quantum dots
A presentation and a generalisation are given of the phenomenon of level
rearrangement, which occurs when an attractive long-range potential is
supplemented by a short-range attractive potential of increasing strength. This
problem has been discovered in condensate-matter physics and has also been
studied in the physics of exotic atoms. A similar phenomenon occurs in a
situation inspired by quantum dots, where a short-range interaction is added to
an harmonic confinement.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, RevTeX
Solving the radial Dirac equations: a numerical odyssey
We discuss, in a pedagogical way, how to solve for relativistic wave
functions from the radial Dirac equations. After an brief introduction, in
Section II we solve the equations for a linear Lorentz scalar potential,
V_s(r), that provides for confinement of a quark. The case of massless u and d
quarks is treated first, as these are necessarily quite relativistic. We use an
iterative procedure to find the eigenenergies and the upper and lower component
wave functions for the ground state and then, later, some excited states.
Solutions for the massive quarks (s, c, and b) are also presented. In Section
III we solve for the case of a Coulomb potential, which is a time-like
component of a Lorentz vector potential, V_v(r). We re-derive, numerically, the
(analytically well-known) relativistic hydrogen atom eigenenergies and wave
functions, and later extend that to the cases of heavier one-electron atoms and
muonic atoms. Finally, Section IV finds solutions for a combination of the V_s
and V_v potentials. We treat two cases. The first is one in which V_s is the
linear potential used in Sec. II and V_v is Coulombic, as in Sec. III. The
other is when both V_s and V_v are linearly confining, and we establish when
these potentials give a vanishing spin-orbit interaction (as has been shown to
be the case in quark models of the hadronic spectrum).Comment: 39 pages (total), 23 figures, 2 table
Magnetic interference patterns in long disordered Josephson junctions
We study a diffusive superconductor - normal metal - superconductor (SNS)
junction in an external magnetic field. In the limit of a long junction, we
find that the form of the dependence of the Josephson current on the field and
on the length of the junction depends on the ratio between the junction width
and the length associated with the magnetic field. A certain critical ratio
between these two length scales separates two different regimes. In narrow
junctions, the critical current exhibits a pure decay as a function of the
junction length or of the magnetic field. In wide junctions, the critical
current exhibits damped oscillations as a function of the same parameters. This
damped oscillating behavior differs from the Fraunhofer pattern typical for
short or tunnel junctions. In wide and long junctions, superconducting pair
correlations and supercurrent are localized along the edges of the junction.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, minor modifications corresponding to the
published versio
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