scholarly journals Criticality of the magnon-bound-state hierarchy for the quantum Ising chain with the long-range interactions

2018 ◽  
Vol 91 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshihiro Nishiyama
2014 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 47008 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Juhász ◽  
I. A. Kovács ◽  
F. Iglói

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Federico Corberi ◽  
Alessandro Iannone ◽  
Manoj Kumar ◽  
Eugenio Lippiello ◽  
Paolo Politi

We study the kinetics after a low temperature quench of the one-dimensional Ising model with long range interactions between spins at distance rr decaying as r^{-\alpha}r−α. For \alpha =0α=0, i.e. mean field, all spins evolve coherently quickly driving the system towards a magnetised state. In the weak long range regime with \alpha >1α>1 there is a coarsening behaviour with competing domains of opposite sign without development of magnetisation. For strong long range, i.e. 0<\alpha <10<α<1, we show that the system shows both features, with probability P_\alpha (N)Pα(N) of having the latter one, with the different limiting behaviours \lim _{N\to \infty}P_\alpha (N)=0limN→∞Pα(N)=0 (at fixed \alpha<1α<1) and \lim _{\alpha \to 1}P_\alpha (N)=1limα→1Pα(N)=1 (at fixed finite NN). We discuss how this behaviour is a manifestation of an underlying dynamical scaling symmetry due to the presence of a single characteristic time \tau _\alpha (N)\sim N^\alphaτα(N)∼Nα.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (171) ◽  
pp. 20200367
Author(s):  
Dan Gorbonos ◽  
James G. Puckett ◽  
Kasper van der Vaart ◽  
Michael Sinhuber ◽  
Nicholas T. Ouellette ◽  
...  

In swarms of flying insects, the motions of individuals are largely uncoordinated with those of their neighbours, unlike the highly ordered motion of bird flocks. However, it has been observed that insects may transiently form pairs with synchronized relative motion while moving through the swarm. The origin of this phenomenon remains an open question. In particular, it is not known if pairing is a new behavioural process or whether it is a natural by-product of typical swarming behaviour. Here, using an ‘adaptive-gravity’ model that proposes that insects interact via long-range gravity-like acoustic attractions that are modulated by the total background sound (via ‘adaptivity’ or fold-change detection) and that reproduces measured features of real swarms, we show that pair formation can indeed occur without the introduction of additional behavioural rules. In the model, pairs form robustly whenever two insects happen to move together from the centre of the swarm (where the background sound is high) towards the swarm periphery (where the background sound is low). Due to adaptivity, the attraction between the pair increases as the background sound decreases, thereby forming a bound state since their relative kinetic energy is smaller than their pair-potential energy. When the pair moves into regions of high background sound, however, the process is reversed and the pair may break up. Our results suggest that pairing should appear generally in biological systems with long-range attraction and adaptive sensing, such as during chemotaxis-driven cellular swarming.


2019 ◽  
Vol 100 (18) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulia Piccitto ◽  
Bojan Žunkovič ◽  
Alessandro Silva

2018 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhangqi Zhu ◽  
Gaoyong Sun ◽  
Wen-Long You ◽  
Da-Ning Shi

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