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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Trends in Magnetism : From Strong Correlations to “-onics” Technology

Yudin, Dmitry January 2015 (has links)
Despite of enormous progress in experimental nanophysics theoretical studies of low-dimensional electron systems still remains a challenging task. Indeed, most of the structures are strongly correlated, so that an effective perturbative treatment is impossible due to the lack of a small parameter. The problem can be partly solved within the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) paradigm, nevertheless the correlations in physically relevant high-temperature superconductors are of purely non-local nature. The recently developed dual fermion approximation, combining field-theoretical diagram technique and numerical methods, allows for explicit account of spatial correlations. The approximation was shown to be of fastest convergence compared with standard DMFT extensions, and along with renormalization group is used here to study Fermi condensation on a triangular lattice near van Hove singularities. The still debated phenomenon of Fermi condensation is believed to be a precursor to strongly correlated low-temperature instability and is found in this thesis to be robust even at high temperature, making its experimental verification feasible. Unlike homogeneous ferromagnetic ordering a variety of non-collinear ground state configurations emerge as a result of competition among exchange, anisotropy, and dipole-dipole interaction. These particle-like states, e.g. magnetic soliton, skyrmion, domain wall, form a spatially localized clot of magnetic energy. Consistent study of spin, which essentially is a quantum mechanical entity, led to the emergence of spintronics (spin-based electronics) and magnonics (photonics with spin waves), in the meanwhile topologically protected magnetic solitons and skyrmions might potentially be applied for data processing and information storage in next generation of electronic technology (rapidly advancing solitonics and skyrmionics). An ability to easily create, address, and manipulate such structures is among the prerequisite forming a basis of "-onics" technology. It is shown here that spins on a kagome lattice, interacting via Heisenberg exchange and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya coupling, allow the formation of topologically protected edge states through which a skyrmion can propagate. Not only can chemical methods be used to design novel functionality, but also geometric structuring. It is demonstrated that for graphene sandwiched between two insulating media external circularly-polarized light serves as an effective magnetic field. The direct practical implication permits to control light polarization and induce spin-waves propagating on the surface of e.g. a topological insulator. The newly discovered Dirac materials, graphene and three-dimensional topological insulators, are not easy to handle. In fact, the quasiparticle band function is gapless preventing them from being used in integrated circuits, nevertheless the problem is shown here to be partially relaxed by placing a vacancy on top of it.
22

Generalized Titchmarsh-Weyl functions and super singular perturbations

Neuner, Christoph January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis we study certain singular Sturm-Liouville differential expressions from an operator theoretic point of view.In particular we are interested in expressions that involve strongly singular potentials as introduced by Gesztesy and Zinchenko.On the ODE side, analyzing these expressions involves the so-called $m$-functions, often generalized Nevanlinna functions, who encapsulate spectral information of the underlying problem.The aim of the two papers in this thesis is to further understanding on the operator theory side.In the first paper, we use a model for super singular perturbations to describe a family of induced self-adjoint realizations of a perturbed Schr\"o\-din\-ger operator, i.e., with a potential of the form $c/x^2 + q$ where $q$ is a perturbation.Following the unperturbed example of Kurasov and Luger, we find that the so-called $Q$-function appearing in this approach is in good agreement with the above named $m$-function.Furthermore, we show that the operator model can be chosen such that $Q \equiv m$.In the second paper, we present a negative result in this area, namely that the supersingular perturbations model cannot be used for all strongly singular potentials.For a potential with a stronger singularity at the origin, namely $1/x^4$, we discuss the asymptotic behaviour of the Weyl solution at zero.It turns out that this function cannot be regularized appropriately and the operator model breaks down.
23

Effective Soft-Mode Theory of Strongly Interacting Fermions in Dirac Semimetals

de Coster, George 11 January 2019 (has links)
We present an effective field theory for interacting electrons in clean semimetals (both three dimensional Dirac semimetals and graphene) in terms of their soft or massless bosonic degrees of freedom. We show, by means of a Ward identity, that the intrinsic semimetal ground state breaks the Sp(4M) symmetry of the theory. In Fermi liquids this enables one to identify the massive, non-Goldstone modes of the theory and integrate them out. Due to the vanishing density of states in semimetals, unlike in Fermi liquids, both Goldstone and non-Goldstone modes are equally soft, and so all two-particle correlations need to be kept. The resulting theory is not perturbative with respect to the electron-electron interaction; rather, it is controlled by means of a systematic loop expansion and allows one to determine the exact asymptotic form of observables in the limits of small frequencies and/or wave vectors. Equivalently, it provides a mechanism of determining the long time-tail and long wavelength behavior of observables and excitations. As a representative application, we use the theory to compute the zero-bias anomaly for the density of states for both short and long-range interactions in two and three dimensions. We find that the leading nonanalyticity in semimetals with a long-ranged interaction appears at the same order in frequency as the one in Fermi liquids, since the effects of the vanishing density of states at the Fermi level are offset by the breakdown of screening. Consequently, we are able to provide a logical scheme to determine the leading non-analytical behavior of observables in semimetals using knowledge of the corresponding non-analyticities in a Fermi liquid. / 2020-01-11
24

Aspects of transport in strongly correlated systems with gravity duals

Romero Bermudez, Aurelio January 2017 (has links)
In this thesis we consider various applications the gauge/gravity duality to study transport in strongly coupled systems. The main content is organized in three parts. In the first part we investigate the interrelation between dimensionality and strength of interactions. It is known that the dynamics of systems in Condensed Matter and General Relativity simplify for high dimensionality. Therefore, in this limit of large dimensionality, analytic results are usually possible. We study the dependence of the conductivity and the entanglement entropy on the space-time dimensionality in two different models of holographic superconductors: one dual to a quantum critical point with spontaneous symmetry breaking, and the other modelled by a charged scalar that condenses at a sufficiently low temperature in the presence of a Maxwell field. In the large dimensionality limit we obtain explicit analytical results for the conductivity at zero temperature and the entanglement entropy. Our results suggest that, as dimensionality increases, the condensate interactions become weaker. In the second part we first investigate the Drude weight and the related Mazur-Suzuki (MS) bound in a broad variety of strongly coupled field theories with a gravity dual at nonzero temperature and chemical potential. We show that the MS bound, which in the context of Condensed Matter provides information on the integrability of the theory, is saturated in Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton (EMd) and R-charged backgrounds. We then explore EMd theories with U(1) spontaneous symmetry breaking, and gravity duals of non-relativistic field theories, in which the MS bound is not saturated. Finally, we study the effect of a weak breaking of translational symmetry and we show that the MS bound sets a lower bound on the DC conductivity for a given scattering time. In the last part, we study asymptotically anti de Sitter Brans-Dicke (BD) backgrounds as effective models of metals with a varying coupling constant. We show that, for translational invariant backgrounds, the zero-frequency conductivity (dc conductivity) deviates from the universal result of EMd models. Once translational symmetry is broken, the shear viscosity to entropy ratio is always lower than the Kovtun-Son-Starinets bound, in line with other gravity backgrounds with momentum relaxation. In the BD models studied, we observed insulating like features in the dc conductivity. However, the module and argument of the optical conductivity at intermediate frequencies are not consistent with cuprates experimental results, even assuming several channel of momentum relaxation. We have also included the research carried out in the first year of the PhD as appendices. The topics studied in these appendices lie outside the main framework of this thesis.
25

Physical and computational applications of strongly-interacting dynamics beyond QCD

Bennett, Edward January 2013 (has links)
In this thesis we investigate numerically SU(2) theories with Dirac—or Majorana—fermions in the adjoint representation. Majorana fermions have historically proven difficult to treat numerically; here, a change of basis is introduced that allows two Majorana fermions to be expressed in terms of one Dirac fermion. This also provides greater insight into the analysis of the properties of theories with Dirac fermions. Attention is focused on the SU(2) theory with a single Dirac flavour (or equivalently two Majorana flavours). Its lattice phase diagram, spectrum, and the anomalous dimension of the chiral condensate are investigated. We observe a long region of constant mass ratios and an anomalous dimension 0.9 ≲ γ∗ ≲ 0.95. The behaviour of the pion mass and the presence of a light scalar in particular point to behaviour that is not traditionally confining; instead the theory appears to lie in or near the conformal window. The topological susceptibility and instanton size distribution are also investigated, for the one-Dirac-flavour theory and additionally the pure-gauge and two-Dirac-flavour (Minimal Walking Technicolor) theories. The properties are found to not depend on number of flavours, indicating a quenching of the fermions in the topology, also consistent with (near-)conformal behaviour (as has previously been reported in studies of other observables for Minimal Walking Technicolor). The code used is described, and a high-performance computing benchmark developed from it is detailed. While the benchmark was originally developed to investigate the performance of different supercomputer architectures for the class of problems we are interested in. Due to the nature of the code on which it is based, it has an unusual flexibility in the demands it may place on machine’s performance characteristics, which may allow it to be applicable to problems outside of lattice physics. The benchmark is used to characterise a number of machines’ relative performance.
26

Static and dynamic properties of strongly coupled quasi-2D Yukawa plasma layers:

Pan, Hong January 2019 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Gabor Kalman / Complex plasma systems have been studied for a long time. In this thesis we focus on a quasi-2D layer system. In fact, most experimental studies of complex plasmas are based on 2D systems, because it is easy to use camera to record the in-plane movement of particles. Unfortunately, due to the finite confining strength, the system is not a strictly 2D layer, it is a quasi-2D layer. We firstly studied the density profile of such a quasi-2D system by density functional theory(DFT). From the density profile research result, we found that the system can form a trilayer structure with proper parameters. Then we studied the dynamical properties of a trilayer system, and for simplicity, we only studied an ideal three layer model, both in liquid and lattice case. In lattice case, we firstly searched the stable lattice structure at different inter-layer distance. Then we used lattice sites summation to construct the dynamical matrix and solve the dispersion relation. For liquid case, we did the theoretical prediction for the collective dispersion by quasi localized charge approximation(QLCA), then we extracted the collective mode information from the molecular dynamics(MD) simulation. The QLCA and MD results were compared and discussed. The reason for the previous gap discrepancy problem is discovered. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2019. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Physics.
27

Theoretical study on electronic properties at interfaces of strongly correlated electron systems / 強相関電子系における界面電子状態の理論的研究

Ueda, Suguru 23 March 2015 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(理学) / 甲第18772号 / 理博第4030号 / 新制||理||1581(附属図書館) / 31723 / 京都大学大学院理学研究科物理学・宇宙物理学専攻 / (主査)教授 川上 則雄, 教授 田中 耕一郎, 教授 松田 祐司 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Science / Kyoto University / DGAM
28

Identification of Triaxial Strongly Deformed Bands and Spectroscopy of High-Spin Normal Deformed Structures in 164Hf

Marsh, Jarrod Christopher 14 December 2013 (has links)
This research encompasses threemajor segments: a search for high-spin triaxial strongly deformed (TSD) bands in 164Hf, spectroscopy of high-spin normal deformed (ND) bands in 164Hf, and a low-spin search in 165Ta. In April 2010, an experiment was carried out using the ATLAS linear accelerator at Argonne National Laboratory (Argonne, IL). A thin (761 microgram/square centimeter) 94Zr target was impacted with a 330MeV 74Ge beam. This produced a 168Hf compound nucleus that decayed via the 4n channel to 164Hf. Offline data analysis was performed using coincidence relationships and gamma-ray intensity analysis to determine the decay pathways and Directional Correlation of Oriented Nuclei (DCO ratios) to determine level spin and parities. The highest extend of the 164Hf level scheme in previous works was near 32 hbar. This research has extended the previously known level scheme to 48 hbar. Seven new normal deformed bands and two triaxial strongly deformed bands have been added. Decay pathways of TSD bands to ND states have been firmly established. Intrinsic configurations of the bands were discussed based on Cranked Shell Model (CSM) calculations. A short discussion of new low-spin structures in 165Ta concludes the research. The experiment was carried out in August 2010 at Yale’s Wright Nuclear Structure Laboratory using their tandem linac. A 228MeV 51V beam was incident upon a 118Sn self-supporting thin target. Data was sorted into gamma-gamma matrices using the WNSL CSCAN code. Three new normal deformed low-spin structures were found, and one previously known but unpublished structure was confirmed, extended, and linked to the Yrast band.
29

State Space Geometry of Low Dimensional Quantum Magnets

Lambert, James January 2022 (has links)
In recent decades enormous progress has been made in studying the geometrical structure of the quantum state space. Far from an abstraction, this geometric struc- ture is defined operationally in terms of the distinguishability of states connected by parameterizations that can be controlled in a laboratory. This geometry is manifest in the kinds of response functions that are measured by well established experimen- tal techniques, such as inelastic neutron scattering. In this thesis we explore the properties of the state space geometry in the vicinity of the ground state of two paradigmatic models of low dimensional magnetism. The first model is the spin-1 anti-ferromagnetic Heisenberg chain, which is a central example of symmetry pro- tected topological physics in one dimension, exhibiting a non-local string order, and symmetry protected short range entanglement. The second is the Kitaev honeycomb model, a rare example of an analytically solvable quantum spin liquid, characterized by long range topological order. In Chapter 2 we employ the single mode approximation to estimate the genuine multipartite entanglement in the spin-1 chain as a function of the unaxial anisotropy up to finite temperature. We find that the genuine multipartite entanglement ex- hibits a finite temperature plateau, and recove the universality class of the phase transition induced by negative anisotropy be examining the finite size scaling of the quantum Fisher information. In Chapter 4 we map out the zero temperature phase diagram in terms of the QFI for a patch of the phase space parameterized by the anisotropy and applied magnetic field, establishing that any non-zero anisotropy en- hances that entanglement of the SPT phase, and the robustness of the phase to finite temperatures. We also establish a connection between genuine multipartite entanglement and state space curvature. In Chapter 3 we turn to the Kitaev honeycomb model and demonstrate that, while the QFI associated to local operators remains trivial, the second derivative of such quantities with respect to the driving parameter exhibit divergences. We characterize the critical exponents associated with these divergences. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Systems composed of many bodies tend to order as their energy is reduced. Steam, a state characterized by the complete disorder of the constituent water molecules, condenses to liquid water as the temperature (energy) decreases, wherein the water molecules are organized enough for insects to walk atop them. Water freezes to ice, which is so ordered that it can hold sleds and skaters. Quantum mechanics allows for patterns of organization that go beyond the solid-liquid-gas states. These patterns are manifest in the smallest degrees of freedom in a solid, the electrons, and are responsible for fridge magnets and transistors. While quantum systems still tend to order at lower energies, they are characterized by omni-present fluctuations that can conceal hidden forms of organization. One can imagine that the states of matter live in a vast space, where each point represents a different pattern. In this thesis we show that by probing the geometry of this space, we can detect hidden kinds of order that would be otherwise invisible to us.
30

Inverse strongly monotone operators and variational inequalities

Chi, Wen-te 23 June 2009 (has links)
In this paper, we report existing convergence results on monotone variational inequalities where the governing monotone operators are either strongly monotone or inverse strongly monotone. We reformulate the variational inequality problem as an equivalent fixed point problem and then use fixed point iteration method to solve the original variational inequality problem. In the case of strong monotonicity case we use the Banach¡¦s contraction principle to define out iteration sequence; while in the case of inverse strong monotonicity we use the technique of averaged mappings to define our iteration sequence. In both cases we prove strong convergence for our iteration methods. An application to a minimization problem is also included.

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