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The superconducting properties of complex materials like the recently discovered iron-pnictides or strontium-ruthenate are often governed by multi-orbital effects. In order to unravel the superconductivity of those materials, we develop a multi-orbital implementation of the functional renormalization group and study the pairing states of several characteristic material systems. Starting with the iron-pnictides, we find competing spin-fluctuation channels that become attractive if the superconducting gap changes sign between the nested portions of the Fermi surface. Depending on material details like doping or pnictogen height, these spin fluctuations then give rise to $s_{\pm}$-wave pairing with or without gap nodes and, in some cases, also change the symmetry to $d$-wave. Near the transition from nodal $s_{\pm}$-wave to $d$-wave pairing, we predict the occurrence of a time-reversal symmetry-broken $(s+id)$-pairing state which avoids gap nodes and is therefore energetically favored. We further study the electronic instabilities of doped graphene, another fascinating material which has recently become accessible and which can effectively be regarded as multi-orbital system. Here, the hexagonal lattice structure assures the degeneracy of two $d$-wave pairing channels, and the system then realizes a chiral $(d+id)$-pairing state in a wide doping range around van-Hove filling. In addition, we also find spin-triplet pairing as well as an exotic spin-density wave phase which both become leading if the long-ranged hopping or interaction parameters are slightly modified, for example, by choosing different substrate materials. Finally, we consider the superconducting state of strontium-ruthenate, a possible candidate for chiral spin-triplet pairing with fascinating properties like the existence of half-quantum vortices obeying non-Abelian statistics. Using a microscopic three orbital description including spin-orbit coupling, we demonstrate that ferromagnetic fluctuations are still sufficient to induce this $\bs{\hat{z}}(p_x\pm ip_y)$-pairing state. The resulting superconducting gap reveals strong anisotropies on the $d_{xy}$-dominated Fermi-surface pocket and nearly vanishes on the other remaining two pockets.
Pulsars (in short for Pulsating Stars) are magnetized, fast rotating neutron stars. The basic picture of a pulsar describes it as a neutron star which has a rotation axis that is not aligned with its magnetic field axis. The emission is assumed to be generated near the magnetic poles of the neutron star and emitted along the open magnetic field lines. Consequently, the corresponding beam of photons is emitted along the magnetic field line axis. The non-alignment of both, the rotation and the magnetic field axis, results in the effect that the emission of the pulsar is only seen if its beam points towards the observer.
The emission from a pulsar is therefore perceived as being pulsed although its generation is not. This rather simple geometrical model is commonly referred to as Lighthouse Model and has been widely accepted. However, it does not deliver an explanation of the precise mechanisms behind the emission from pulsars (see below for more details).
Nowadays more than 2000 pulsars are known. They are observed at various wavelengths. Multiwavelength studies have shown that some pulsars are visible only at certain wavelengths while the emission from others can be observed throughout large parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. An example of the latter case is the Crab pulsar which is also the main object of interest in this thesis. Originating from a supernova explosion observed in 1054 A.D. and discovered in 1968, the Crab pulsar has been the central subject of numerous studies. Its pulsed emission is visible throughout the whole electromagnetic spectrum which makes it a key figure in understanding the possible mechanisms of multiwavelength emission from pulsars.
The Crab pulsar is also well known for its radio emission strongly varying on long as well as on short time scales. While long time scale behaviour from a pulsar is usually examined through the use of its average profile (a profile resulting from averaging of a large number of individual pulses resulting from single rotations), short time scale behaviour is examined via its single pulses. The short time scale anomalous behaviour of its radio emission is commonly referred to as Giant Pulses and represents the central topic of this thesis.
While current theoretical approaches place the origin of the radio emission from a pulsar like the Crab near its magnetic poles (Polar Cap Model) as already indicated by the Lighthouse model, its emission at higher frequencies, especially its gamma-ray emission, is assumed to originate further away in the geometrical region surrounding a pulsar which is commonly referred to as a pulsar magnetosphere (Outer Gap Model). Consequently, the respective emission regions are usually assumed not to be connected. However, past observational results from the Crab pulsar represent a contradiction to this assumption.
Radio giant pulses from the Crab pulsar have been observed to emit large amounts of energy on very short time scales implying small emission regions on the surface of the pulsar. Such energetic events might also leave a trace in the gamma-ray emission of the Crab pulsar.
The aim of this thesis is to search for this connection in the form of a correlation study between radio giant pulses and gamma-photons from the Crab pulsar.
To make such a study possible, a multiwavelength observational campaign was organized for which radio observations were independently applied for, coordinated and carried out with the Effelsberg radio telescope and the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope and gamma-ray observations with the Major Atmospheric Imaging Cherenkov telescopes. The corresponding radio and gamma-ray data sets were reduced and the correlation analysis thereafter consisted of three different approaches:
1) The search for a clustering in the differences of the times of arrival of radio giant pulses and gamma-photons;
2) The search for a linear correlation between radio giant pulses and gamma-photons using the Pearson correlation approach;
3) A search for an increase of the gamma-ray flux around occurring radio giant pulses.
In the last part of the correlation study an increase of the number of gamma-photons centered on a radio giant pulse by about 17% (in contrast with the number of gamma-photons when no radio giant pulse occurs in the same time window) was discovered. This finding suggests that a new theoretical approach for the emission of young pulsars like the Crab pulsar, is necessary.
The most energetic versions of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) feature two highly-relativistic plasma outflows, so-called jets, that are created in the vicinity of the central supermassive black hole and evolve in opposite directions. In blazars, which dominate the extragalactic gamma-ray sky, the jets are aligned close to the observer's line of sight leading to strong relativistic beaming effects of the jet emission. Radio observations especially using very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) provide the best way to gain direct information on the intrinsic properties of jets down to sub-parsec scales, close to their formation region.
In this thesis, I focus on the properties of three AGNs, IC 310, PKS 2004-447, and 3C 111 that belong to the small non-blazar population of gamma-ray-loud AGNs. In these kinds of AGNs, the jets are less strongly aligned with respect to the observer than in blazars. I study them in detail with a variety of radio astronomical instruments with respect to their high-energy emission and in the context of the large samples in the monitoring programmes MOJAVE and TANAMI. My analysis of radio interferometric observations and flux density monitoring data reveal very different characteristics of the jet emission in these sources. The work presented in this thesis illustrates the diversity of the radio properties of gamma-ray-loud AGNs that do not belong to the dominating class of blazars.
It is aim of this work to develop, implement, and apply a new numerical scheme for modeling turbulent, multiphase astrophysical flows such as galaxy cluster cores and star forming regions. The method combines the capabilities of adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) and large-eddy simulations (LES) to capture localized features and to represent unresolved turbulence, respectively; it will be referred to as Fluid mEchanics with Adaptively Refined Large-Eddy SimulationS or FEARLESS.
Die stetige Degradation von Halbleiterlasern, speziell bei Bleichalkogenidlasern, erfordert in spektroskopischen Systemen eine regelmäßige Überwachung typischer Eigenschaften wie Abstimmcharakteristik und Linienbreite. Im Hinblick auf einen möglichst hohen Automatisierungsgrad wird langfristig eine Online-Analysemethode zur Überwachung notwendig sein. Die üblicherweise verwendete Methode, den Laserarbeitspunkt über zugrunde liegende Modenkarten einzustellen, hat den gravierenden Nachteil, dass solche Modenkarten in der Regel nicht unter dynamischen Modulationsbedingungen vermessen wurden. Gerade im dynamischen Fall sind diese Karten empfindlich abhängig gegenüber Veränderungen durch Zyklieren und Degradieren des Lasers. Etalons (Etalonsignale) sind bezüglich der Abstimmcharakteristik nicht zuverlässig genug und von daher für eine wünschenswerte Automatisierung nicht ausreichen. Modensprünge oder schwache Rückkopplungseffekte lassen sich im Interferogramm nicht ohne weiteres identifiziert. Eine erweiterte Analyse der Störungen dieser Interferogramme im Zeit-Frequenzbereich mittels einer AOK(Adaptive Optimal Kernel)-Transformation erwies sich speziell bei Signalen mit wenigen Perioden als deutlich aussagekräftiger. Mittels optischer Homodynmischung wurde die Linienbreite von Bleichalkogenidlasern ermittelt. Bei inkohärenter Überlagerung entspricht die spektrale Verteilung der Mischung der Faltung der ursprünglichen Verteilung mit sich selbst. Der Laser wird dabei nicht abgestimmt, die optische Laufzeitverzögerung wurde mittels integrierter White-Zelle realisiert. Es wurde beobachtet, dass je nach Grad des Rauschens des Injektionsstroms, das Linienbreitenprofil von Lorentz nach Gauß überging. Mit einem externen CO2-Laser als lokalen Oszillator wurden Heterodynmessungen durchgeführt. Die Linienbreite eines CO2-Lasers ist mit wenigen kHz im Vergleich zu derjenigen eines Bleichalkogenidlasers vernachlässigbar und die Überlagerung erfolgt absolut inkohärent. Gemessen wurden spektrale Verteilungen mit typischem Lorentzprofil von 10 MHz bis zu 100 MHz und darüber hinaus. Auffällig waren häufig symmetrische Nebenpeaks, die in den Bereichen der Seitenflanken des Lorentzprofils auftraten. Anhand einer numerischen Simulation eines Modells einer Laserdiode, basierend auf Ratengleichungen mit für Bleichalkogenidlasern typischen Parameterwerten, konnte verdeutlicht werden, dass sich durch das nichtlineare Lasermodell ausgeprägte Vielfache von Resonanzen bereits im Abstand von 25 MHz ausbilden können. Derartige Resonanzen tauchen im E-Feld-Spektrum als typische Relaxationsoszillationen in den Seitenbändern wieder auf und erklären die in der Messung beobachteten Nebenpeaks innerhalb der spektralen Verteilung. Die Stärke der Seitenbänder ist ein Maß für die Korrelation zwischen Phasen- und Amplitudenfluktuationen. Das Modell für die numerische Berechnung des E-Feldes wurde mit einem thermischen Verhalten erweitert. Eine umfassende Charakterisierungsmethode zur automatisierten Einstellung eines modulierten Lasersystems muss dynamisch und zeitaufgelöst erfolgen. Die Auswertung optischer Mischfrequenzen beschränkt sich dabei nicht mehr auf die direkte Interpretation von einzelnen Spektren, sondern erweitert sich auf die Analyse im Zeit-Frequenzraum. Für eine direkte und schnelle Zeitfrequenztransformation bietet sich ein „Gefensterte Fouriertransformation“ (STFT) an, die sich außerdem relativ einfach in moderne Signalprozessortechnik implementieren lässt. Sie erweist sich als sehr robust und für die hier erforderliche Analyse von Heterodynsignalen als ausreichend. Mit der Festlegung des Analysefensters innerhalb einer STFT ist die Auflösung in Zeit und Frequenz fest definiert. Analysen von Mischsignalen mit einer kontinuierlichen Wavelettransformation haben vergleichsweise gezeigt, dass Details im Zeitfrequenzraum zwar besser herausgearbeitet werden können, jedoch ist der Rechenaufwand durch die variable Skalierung und somit stark redundante Analyse und ihre Darstellung unverhältnismäßig größer. Eine Analyse des Linienbreitenprofils erfolgt dabei über die Entwicklung der Skalierung eines Signals. Die über Heterodynsignale ermittelte effektive Linienbreite bei einer modulierten Abstimmung sollte eher als „dynamische“ oder „intrinsische“ Laserlinienbreite bezeichnet werden. Eine direkte Korrelation der Frequenzvariation des Lasers mit dem Stromrauschen des Injektionsstroms ist offensichtlich. Die wirksame Bandbreite des Stromrauschens wird durch die Systemelektronik einerseits und die Modulationsbandbreite des Lasers andererseits begrenzt. Außer den wichtigen Parametern wie Abstimmung und Linienbreite lassen sich über die dynamische Zeitfrequenzanalyse von Heterodynsignalen darüber hinaus weitere Phänomene wie Rückkopplung, Modenüberlagerung oder Einschwingverhalten aufgrund direkter Kopplung zwischen Intensitäts und Frequenzmodulation beobachten.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beleuchtet verschiedene Aspekte des Ladungstransports in Heterokontakten aus Normal- (N) und Supraleitern (S) im Rahmen des Bogoliubov-de Gennes-Formalismus. Dabei ist der bestimmende Prozeß die Andreev-Streuung: die Streuung von Elektronen in Löcher, bzw. umgekehrt, an räumlichen Variationen des supraleitenden Paarpotentials unter Erzeugung, bzw. Vernichtung, eines Cooperpaares und damit der Induktion eines Suprastroms. Befindet sich ein Supraleiter zwischen zwei normalleitenden Bereichen, so wandelt sich der an der einen NS-Phasengrenze durch Andreev-Streuung induzierte Suprastrom an der anderen NS-Phasengrenze wieder in einen durch Quasiteilchen getragenen Strom um. Diese Umwandlung erfolgt durch den Einfall eines Quasiteilchens, dessen Charakter dem des auf der gegenüberliegenden Seite des Supraleiters einfallenden Quasiteilchens entgegengerichtet ist, wie anhand von Wellenpaket-Rechnungen explizit gezeigt wird. Ersetzt man den Supraleiter durch einen mesoskopischen SNS-Kontakt, ist die Vielteilchen-Konfiguration in der mittleren N-Schicht phasenkohärent und daher verschieden von den unkorrelierten Quasiteilchen-Anregungen, die die verschobene Fermi-Kugel in den normalleitenden Zuleitungen bilden. Die Josephson-Ströme, die durch die Quasiteilchen in der mittleren N-Schicht getragen werden, werden unter zwei verschiedenen Modellannahmen berechnet: Im einen Fall werden nur Streuzustände als Startzustände betrachtet, im anderen, bei gleichzeitiger Berücksichtigung eines normalstreuenden Potentials, nur gebundene Zustände. Der SNS-Kontakt wird durch eine supraleitend/halbleitende Heterostruktur modelliert, deren Parameter-Werte sich an den Experimenten der Gruppe von Herbert Kroemer in Santa Barbara orientieren. Wenn die supraleitenden Bereiche ohne normalleitende Zuleitungen direkt mit einem Reservoir von Cooperpaaren verbunden sind, fallen nur Quasiteilchen in Streuzuständen aus den supraleitenden Bänken auf die NS-Phasengrenzen des Kontaktes ein. Mit den Normalleiter-Wellenfunktionen, die sich bei Anlegen einer Spannung V aus diesen Startzuständen entwickeln, wird die Josephson-Wechselstromdichte in der Mitte der N-Schicht bei der Temperatur T = 2,2 K berechnet. Die Stromdichte weist spannungsabhängige Oszillationen in der Zeit auf, deren Periode das Inverse der Josephson-Frequenz ist. Alle Stromdichten zeigen bei kleinen Spannungen einen steilen Anstieg ihres Betrages, der durch Quasiteilchen zustandekommt, die durch das elektrische Feld aus dem Kondensat kommend in den Paarpotentialtopf hineingezogen werden und dort bei kleinen Spannungen eine große Zahl von Andreev-Streuungen erfahren, wobei sie bei jedem Elektron-Loch-Zyklus die Ladung 2e durch die N-Schicht transportieren. Im zweiten betrachteten Fall wird unter Berücksichtigung von Normalstreuung der Gesamtzustand des Systems zu jedem Zeitpunkt durch eine Superposition von gebundenen Zuständen ausgedrückt. Die Energie dieser gebundenen Zustände ist abhängig von der Phasendifferenz Phi zwischen den supraleitenden Schichten. Für Werte der Phasendifferenz von ganzzahligen Vielfachen von Pi sind Zustände entgegengerichteter Impulse paarweise entartet. Das normalstreuende Potential mischt diese Zustände, hebt ihre Entartung auf und führt zu Energielücken: Es bilden sich Energiebänder im Phi-Raum, die formal den Bloch-Bändern von Kristallen im Wellenzahlraum entsprechen. Wird eine äußere Spannung angelegt, so ändert sich die Phasendifferenz gemäß der Josephson-Gleichung mit der Zeit und die Quasiteilchen oszillieren in ihren jeweiligen Phi-Bloch-Bändern: Diese Josephson-Bloch-Oszillationen ergeben den "normalen" Josephson-Wechselstrom, der zwischen positiven und negativen Werten schwingt und im zeitlichen Mittel Null ist. Zusätzlich können die Quasiteilchen durch Zener-Tunneln --- wie der analoge Prozeß in der Halbleiterphysik genannt wird --- in höhere Bänder übergehen. Während sich die Richtung der Josephson-Stromdichte zu den Zeiten minimaler Energielücke umkehrt, hat die Zener-Tunnel-Stromdichte nach einem Tunnel-Prozeß das gleiche Vorzeichen, das die Josephson-Stromdichte vor dem Tunnel-Prozeß hatte. Wenn die angelegte Spannung hinreichend groß ist und genügend Quasiteilchen in das höhere Band tunneln, überkompensiert die Zener-Tunnel-Stromdichte in der Halbperiode nach dem Tunnel-Prozeß die Josephson-Stromdichte, und die Gesamtstromdichte schwingt wieder in dieselbe Richtung wie vor dem Zener-Tunneln. Somit hat sich gewissermaßen die Periode halbiert: Die Gesamtstromdichte schwingt mit der doppelten Josephson-Frequenz. Allen untersuchten Aspekten des Ladungstransports durch Heterokontakte aus Normal- und Supraleitern ist eines gemein: Der für ihr Verständnis fundamentale Prozeß ist die Andreev-Streuung.
The main goal of this thesis is to elucidate the sense in which recent experimental progress in condensed matter physics, namely the verification of two-dimensional Dirac-like materials and their control in ballistic- as well as hydrodynamic transport experiments enables the observation of a well-known 'high-energy' phenomenon: The parity anomaly of planar quantum electrodynamics (QED\(_{2+1}\)). In a nutshell, the low-energy physics of two-dimensional Quantum Anomalous Hall (QAH) insulators like (Hg,Mn)Te quantum wells or magnetically doped (Bi,Sb)Te thin films can be described by the combined response of two 2+1 space-time dimensional Chern insulators with a linear dispersion in momentum. Due to their Dirac-like spectra, each of those Chern insulators is directly related to the parity anomaly of planar quantum electrodynamics. However, in contrast to a pure QED\(_{2+1}\) system, the Lagrangian of each Chern insulator is described by two different mass terms: A conventional momentum-independent Dirac mass \(m\), as well as a momentum-dependent so-called Newtonian mass term \(B \vert \mathbf{k} \vert^2\). According to the parity anomaly it is not possible to well-define a parity- and U(1) gauge invariant quantum system in 2+1 space-time dimensions. More precisely, starting with a parity symmetric theory at the classical level, insisting on gauge-invariance at the quantum level necessarily induces parity-odd terms in the calculation of the quantum effective action. The role of the Dirac mass term in the calculation of the effective QED\(_{2+1}\) action has been initially studied in Phys. Rev. Lett. 51, 2077 (1983). Even in the presence of a Dirac mass, the associated fermion determinant diverges and lacks gauge invariance. This requires a proper regularization/renormalizaiton scheme and, as such, transfers the peculiarities of the parity anomaly to the massive case.
In the scope of this thesis, we connect the momentum-dependent Newtonian mass term of a Chern insulator to the parity anomaly. In particular, we reveal, that in the calculation of the effective action, before renormalization, the Newtonian mass term acts similarly to a parity-breaking element of a high-energy regularization scheme. This calculation allows us to derive the finite frequency correction to the DC Hall conductivity of a QAH insulator. We derive that the leading order AC correction contains a term proportional to the Chern number. This term originates from the Newtonian mass and can be measured via electrical or via magneto-optical experiments. The Newtonian mass, in particular, significantly changes the resonance structure of the AC Hall conductivity in comparison to pure Dirac systems like graphene.
In addition, we study the effective action of the aforementioned Chern insulators in external out-of-plane magnetic fields. We show that as a consequence of the parity anomaly the QAH phase in (Hg,Mn)Te quantum wells or in magnetically doped (Bi,Sb)Te thin films survives in out-of-plane magnetic fields, violates the Onsager relation, and can therefore be distinguished from a conventional quantum Hall (QH) response. As a smoking-gun of the QAH phase in increasing magnetic fields, we predict a transition from a quantized Hall plateau with \(\sigma_\mathrm{xy}= -\mathrm{e}^2/\mathrm{h}\) to a not perfectly quantized plateau which is caused by scattering processes between counter-propagating QH and QAH edge states. This transition is expected to be of significant relevance in paramagnetic QAH insulators like (Hg,Mn)Te/CdTe quantum wells, in which the exchange interaction competes against the out-of-plane magnetic field.
All of the aforementioned results do not incorporate finite temperature effects. In order to shed light on such phenomena, we further analyze the finite temperature Hall response of 2+1 dimensional Chern insulators under the combined influence of a chemical potential and an out-of-plane magnetic field. As we have mentioned above, this non-dissipative transport coefficient is directly related to the parity anomaly of planar quantum electrodynamics. Within the scope of our analysis we show that the parity anomaly itself is not renormalized by finite temperature effects. However, the parity anomaly induces two terms of different physical origin in the effective Chern-Simons action of a QAH insulator, which are directly proportional to its Hall conductivity. The first term is temperature and chemical potential independent and solely encodes the intrinsic topological response. The second term specifies the non-topological thermal response of conduction- and valence band modes, respectively. We show that the relativistic mass \(m\) of a Chern insulator counteracts finite temperature effects, whereas its non-relativistic Newtonian mass \(B \vert \mathbf{k} \vert^2 \) enhances these corrections. In addition, we are extending our associated analysis to finite out-of-plane magnetic fields, and relate the thermal response of a Chern insulator therein to the spectral asymmetry, which is a measure of the parity anomaly in out-of-plane magnetic fields.
In the second part of this thesis, we study the hydrodynamic properties of two-dimensional electron systems with a broken time-reversal and parity symmetry. Within this analysis we are mainly focusing on the non-dissipative transport features originating from a peculiar hydrodynamic transport coefficient: The Hall viscosity \(\eta_\mathrm{H}\). In out-of-plane magnetic fields, the Hall viscous force directly competes with the Lorentz force, as both mechanisms contribute to the overall Hall voltage. In our theoretical considerations, we present a way of uniquely distinguishing these two contributions in a two-dimensional channel geometry by calculating their functional dependencies on all external parameters. We are in particular deriving that the ratio of the Hall viscous contribution to the Lorentz force contribution is negative and that its absolute value decreases with an increasing width, slip-length and carrier density. Instead, it increases with the electron-electron mean free path in the channel geometry considered. We show that in typical materials such as GaAs the Hall viscous contribution can dominate the Lorentz signal up to a few tens of millitesla until the total Hall voltage vanishes and eventually is exceeded by the Lorentz contribution. Last but not least, we derive that the total Hall electric field has a parabolic form originating from Lorentz effects. Most remarkably, the offset of this parabola is directly characterized by the Hall viscosity. Therefore, in summary, our results pave the way to measure and to identify the Hall viscosity via both global and local measurements of the entire Hall voltage.
At the present day the idea of cosmological inflation constitutes an important extension of Big Bang theory. Since its appearance in the early 1980’s many physical mechanisms have been worked out that put the inflationary expansion of space that proceeds the Hot Big Bang on a sound theoretical basis. Among the achievements of the theory of inflation are the explanaition of the almost Euclidean geometry of ‘visible’space, the homogeneity of the cosmic background radiation but, in particular, also the tiny inhomogeneity of a relative amplitude of 10−5. In many models of inflation the inflationary phase ends only locally. Hence, there exists the possibility that the inflationary process still goes on in regions beyond our visual horizon. This property is commonly termed ‘eternal inflation’. In the framework of a cosmological scalar fields, eternal inflation can manifest itself in a variety of ways. On the one hand fluctuations of the field, if sufficiently large, can work against the classical trajectory and therefore counteract the end of inflation. In regions where this is the case the accelerated expansion of space continues at a higher rate. In parts of this region the process may replicate itself again and in this way may continue throughout all of time. Space and field are said to reproduce themselves. On the other hand, a mechanism that can occur in addition or independent of the latter, is so called vacuum tunneling. If the potential of the scalar field has several local minima, a semi-classical calculation suggests that within a spherical region, a bubble, the field can tunnel to another state. The respective tunneling rates depend on the potential difference and the shape of the potential between the states. Generally, the tunneling rate is exponentially suppressed, which means that the inflation lasts for a long time before tunneling takes place. The ongoing inflationary process effectively reduces local curvature, anistotropy and inhomogeneity, so that this property is known as the ‘cosmic no-hair conjecture’. For this reason cosmological considerations of the evolution of bubbles thus far almost entirely involved vacuum (de Sitter) backgrounds. However, new insights in the framework of string theory suggest high tunneling rates which allow for the possibility of bubble nucleation in non-vacuum dominated backgrounds. In this case the evolution of the bubble depends on the properties of the background spacetime. A deeper introduction in chapter 4 is followed by the presentation of the Lemaître-Tolman spacetime in chapter 5 which constitutes the background spacetime in the study of the effect of matter and inhomogeneity on the evolution of vacuum bubbles. In chapter 6 we explicitly describe the application of the ‘thin-shell’ formalism and the resulting system of equations. This is succeeded in chapter 7 by the detailed analysis of bubble evolution in various limits of the Lemaître-Tolman spacetime and a Robertson-Walker spacetime with a rapid phase transition. The central observations are that the presence of dust, at a fixed surface energy density, goes along with a smaller nucleation volume and possibly leads to a a collapse of the bubble. In an expanding background, the radially inhomogeneous dust profile is efficiently diluted so that there is essentially no effect on the evolution of the domain wall. This changes in a radially inhomogeneous curvature profile, positive curvature decelerates the expansion of the bubble. Moreover, we point out that the adopted approach does not allow for a treatment of a, physically expected, matter transfer so that the results are to be understood as preliminary under this caveat. In the second part of this thesis we consider potential observable consequences of bubble collisions in the cosmic microwave background radiation. The topological nature of the signal suggests the use of statistics that are well suited to quantify the morphological properties of the temperature fluctuations. In chapter 10 we present Minkowski Functionals (MFs) that exactly provide such statistics. The presented error analysis allows for a higher precision of numerical MFs in comparison to earlier methods. In chapter 12 we present the application of our algorithm to a Gaussian and a collision map. We motivate the expected MFs and extract their numerical counterparts. We find that our least-squares fitting procedure accurately reproduces an underlying signal only when a large number of realizations of maps are averaged over, while for a single WMAP and PLANCK resolution map, only when a highly prominent disk, with |δT| = 2√σG and ϑd = 40◦, we are able to recover the result. This is unfortunate, as it means that MF are intrinsically too noisy to be able to distinguish cold and hot spots in the CMB for small sizes.
The quest for finding a unifying theory for both quantum theory and gravity lies at the heart of much of the research in high energy physics. Although recent years have witnessed spectacular experimental confirmation of our expectations from Quantum Field Theory and General Relativity, the question of unification remains as a major open problem. In this context, the perturbative aspects of quantum black holes represent arguably the best of our knowledge of how to proceed in this pursue.
In this thesis we investigate certain aspects of quantum gravity in 2 + 1 dimensional anti-de Sitter space (AdS3), and its connection to Conformal field theories in 1 + 1 dimensions (CFT2), via the AdS/CFT correspondence.
We study the thermodynamics properties of higher spin black holes. By focusing on the spin-4 case, we show that black holes carrying higher spin charges display a rich phase diagram in the grand canonical ensemble, including phase transitions of the Hawking-Page type, first order inter-black hole transitions, and a second order critical point.
We investigate recent proposals on the connection between bulk codimension-1 volumes and computational complexity in the CFT. Using Tensor Networks we provide concrete evidence of why these bulk volumes are related to the number of gates in a quantum circuit, and exhibit their topological properties. We provide a novel formula to compute this complexity directly in terms of entanglement entropies, using techniques from Kinematic space.
We then move in a slightly different direction, and study the quantum properties of black holes via de Functional Renormalisation Group prescription coming from Asymptotic safety. We avoid the arbitrary scale setting by restricting to a narrower window in parameter space, where only Newton’s coupling and the cosmological constant are allowed to vary. By one assumption on the properties of Newton’s coupling, we find black hole solutions explicitly. We explore their thermodynamical properties, and discover that very large black holes exhibit very unusual features.
The present thesis is concerned with the automated computation of integrated and differential
cross sections of diboson production in proton–proton and electron–positron collisions at very
high energies, including a resummation of electroweak Sudakov logarithms to all orders in the
fine-structure constant using soft–collinear effective theory.
The search for new physics at future colliders such as the FCC–hh or the CLIC requires
precise predictions for scattering cross sections from the theoretical high-energy physics com-
munity. Electroweak Sudakov logarithms, which currently limit the accuracy of predictions in
the high-energy tails of differential distributions for LHC-like energies, are known to destroy the
convergence behaviour of the fixed-order perturbative series, once sufficiently high energies are
considered.
To resum these large corrections, soft–collinear effective theory has been applied to simple
processes, which permits analytic calculations. Within this work, we present an automated
computation within a Monte Carlo integration framework, thus facilitating the computation of
fully differential cross section to complicated processes. This requires the use of the Catani–
Seymour subtraction algorithm to treat the occurring infrared divergences. The machinery is
applied to all diboson processes with intermediate weak gauge bosons, including the photon-
induced W+ W− -production channel.
To this end we carefully study the validity of the necessary assumptions such as the double-
pole approximation and estimate the order of magnitude of neglected effects. Especially the
non-doubly-resonant contributions turn out to be sizeable in several interesting phase-space
regions.
For lepton collisions at 3 TeV we obtain the integrated cross sections of W-pair and Z-pair
production to be shifted by more than 20% with respect to the Born value, owing to the resum-
mation of the leading-logarithmic corrections These effects are partly cancelled by subleading
effects. For proton–proton collisions at √
s = 100 TeV we observe sizeable resummation effects
in the high-energy tails, while the integrated cross sections are dominated by interactions, for
which soft–collinear effective theory is not applicable.
The thesis deals with the automated generation and efficient evaluation of scattering amplitudes in general relativistic quantum field theories at one-loop order in perturbation theory. At the
present time we lack signals beyond the Standard Model which, in the past, have guided the
high-energy physics community, and ultimately led to the discovery of new physics phenomena.
In the future, precision tests could acquire this guiding role by systematically probing the Standard Model and constraining Beyond the Standard Model theories. As current experimental
constraints strongly favour Standard Model-like theories, only small deviations with respect to the Standard Model are expected which need to be studied in detail. The required precision
demands one-loop corrections in all future analyses, ideally in a fully automated way, allowing
to test a variety of observables in different models and in an effective field theory approach.
In the process of achieving this goal we have developed an enhanced version of the tool
Recola and on this basis the generalization Recola2. These tools represent fully automated
tree- and one-loop-amplitude providers for the Standard Model, or in the case of Recola2
for general models. Concerning the algorithm, we use a purely numerical and fully recursive
approach allowing for extreme calculations of yet unmatched complexity. Recola has led to the first computation involving 9-point functions. Beyond the Standard Model theories and Effective Field theories are integrated into the Recola2 framework as model files. Renormalized model files are produced with the newly developed tool Rept1l, which can perform the renormalization in a fully automated way, starting from nothing but Feynman rules. In view of validation, we have extended Recola2 to new gauges such as the Background-Field Method and the class of Rxi gauges. In particular, the Background-Field Method formulation for new theories serves as an automated validation, and is very useful in practical calculations and the formulation of renormalization conditions. We have applied the system to produce the first results for Higgs-boson production in Higgs strahlung and vector-boson fusion in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and the Higgs-Singlet Extension of the Standard Model. All in all, we have laid the foundation for an automated generation and computation of one-loop amplitudes within a large class of phenomenologically interesting theories. Furthermore, we enable the use of our system via a very flexible and dynamic control which does not require any intermediate intervention.
Since the genesis of condensed matter physics, strongly correlated fermionic systems have shown a variety of fascinating properties and remain a vital topic in the field.
Such systems arise through electronic interaction, and despite decades of intensive research, no holistic approach to solving this problem has been found.
During that time, physicists have compiled a wealth of individual experimental and theoretical results, which together give an invaluable insight into these materials, and, in some instances, can explain correlated phenomena.
However, there are several systems that stubbornly refuse to fall completely in line with current theoretical descriptions, among them the high-\( T_c{}\) cuprates and heavy fermion compounds.
Although the two material classes have been around for the better part of the last 50 years, large portions of their respective phase diagram are still under intensive debate.
Recent experiments in several electron-doped cuprates compounds, e.g. neodymium cerium copper oxide (Nd\(_{2x}\)Ce\(_x\)CuO\(_4\)), reveal a charge ordering about an antiferromagnetic ground state.
So far, it has not been conclusively clarified how this intertwining of charge and spin polarization comes about and how it can be reconciled with a rigorous theoretical description.
The heavy-fermion semimetals, on the other hand, have enjoyed renewed scientific interest with the discovery of topological Kondo insulators, a new material class offering a unique interface of topology, symmetry breaking, and correlated phenomena. In this context, samarium hexaboride (SmB\(_6\)) has emerged as a prototypical system, which may feature a topological ground state.
In this thesis, we present a spin rotational invariant auxiliary particle approach to investigate the propensities of interacting electrons towards forming new states of order.
In particular, we study the onset of spin and charge order in high-\( T_c{}\) cuprate systems and Kondo lattices, as well as the interplay of magnetism and topology.
To that end, we use a sophisticated mean-field approximation of bosonic auxiliary particles augmented by a stability analysis of the saddle point via Gaussian fluctuations.
The latter enables the derivation of dynamic susceptibilities, which describe the response of the system under external fields and offer a direct comparison to experiments.
Both the mean-field and fluctuation formalisms require a numerical tool that is capable of extremizing the saddle point equations, on the one hand, and reliably solving a loop integral of the susceptibility-type, on the other.
A full, from scratch derivation of the formalism tailored towards a software implementation, is provided and pedagogically reviewed.
The auxiliary particle method allows for a rigorous description of incommensurate magnetic order and compares well to other established numerical and analytical techniques.
Within our analysis, we employ the two-dimensional one-band Hubbard as well as the periodic Anderson model as minimal Hamiltonians for the high-\( T_c{}\) cuprates and Kondo systems, respectively.
For the former, we observe a regime of intertwined charge- and spin-order in the electron-doped regime, which matches recent experimental observations in the cuprate material Nd\(_{2x}\)Ce\(_x\)CuO\(_4\).
Furthermore, we localize the emergence of a Kondo regime in the periodic Anderson model and establish the magnetic phase diagram of the two-band model for topological Kondo insulators.
The emerging antiferromagnetic ground state can be characterized by its topological properties and shows, for a non-trivial phase, topologically protected hinge modes.
Calculations of multi-particle processes at the one-loop level: precise predictions for the LHC
(2007)
The Standard Model (SM) of elementary particle physics provides a uniform framework for the description of three fundamental forces, the electromagnetic and weak forces, describing interactions between quarks and leptons, and the strong force, describing a much stronger interaction between the coloured quarks. Numerous experimental tests have been performed in the last thirty years, showing a spectacular agreement with the theoretical predictions of the Standard Model, even at the per mille level, therefore validating the model at the quantum level. An important cornerstone of the Standard Model is the Higgs mechanism, which provides a possible explanation of electroweak symmetry breaking, responsible for the masses of elementary fermions and the W and Z bosons, the carriers of the weak force. This mechanism predicts a scalar boson, the Higgs boson, which has escaped its discovery so far. If the Higgs mechanism is indeed realised in nature, the upcoming Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN will be able to find the associated Higgs boson. The discovery of a Higgs boson by itself is not sufficient to establish the Higgs mechanism, the basic ingredient being the Higgs potential which predicts trilinear and quartic couplings. These have to be confirmed experimentally by the study of multi-Higgs production. We therefore present a calculation of the loop-induced processes gg to HH and gg to HHH, and investigate the observability of multi-Higgs boson production at the LHC in the Standard Model and beyond. While the SM cross sections are too small to allow observation at the LHC, we demonstrate that physics beyond the SM can lead to amplified, observable cross sections. Furthermore, the applicability of the heavy top quark approximation in two- and three-Higgs boson production is investigated. We conclude that multi-Higgs boson production at the SuperLHC is an interesting probe of Higgs sectors beyond the SM and warrants further study. Despite the great success of the SM, it is widely believed that this model cannot be valid for arbitrarily high energies. The LHC will probe the TeV scale and theoretical arguments indicate the appearance of physics beyond the SM at this scale. The search for new physics requires a precise understanding of the SM. Precise theoretical predictions are needed which match the accuracy of the experiments. For the LHC, most analyses require next-to-leading order (NLO) precision. Only then will we be able to reliably verify or falsify different models. At the LHC, many interesting signatures involve more than two particles in the final state. Precise theoretical predictions for such multi-leg processes are a highly nontrivial task and new efficient methods have to be applied. The calculation of the process PP to VV+jet at NLO is an important background process to Higgs production in association with a jet at the LHC. We compute the virtual corrections to this process which form the "bottleneck" for obtaining a complete NLO prediction. The resulting analytic expressions are generated with highly automated computer routines and translated into a flexible Fortran code, which can be employed in the computation of differential cross sections of phenomenological interest. The obtained results for the virtual corrections indicate that the QCD corrections are sizable and should be taken into account in experimental studies for the LHC.
In this thesis we study various aspects of chaos synchronization of time-delayed coupled chaotic maps. A network of identical nonlinear units interacting by time-delayed couplings can synchronize to a common chaotic trajectory. Even for large delay times the system can completely synchronize without any time shift. In the first part we study chaotic systems with multiple time delays that range over several orders of magnitude. We show that these time scales emerge in the Lyapunov spectrum: Different parts of the spectrum scale with the different delays. We define various types of chaos depending on the scaling of the maximum exponent. The type of chaos determines the synchronization ability of coupled networks. This is, in particular, relevant for the synchronization properties of networks of networks where time delays within a subnetwork are shorter than the corresponding time delays between the different subnetworks. If the maximum Lyapunov exponent scales with the short intra-network delay, only the elements within a subnetwork can synchronize. If, however, the maximum Lyapunov exponent scales with the long inter-network connection, complete synchronization of all elements is possible. The results are illustrated analytically for Bernoulli maps and numerically for tent maps. In the second part the attractor dimension at the transition to complete chaos synchronization is investigated. In particular, we determine the Kaplan-Yorke dimension from the spectrum of Lyapunov exponents for iterated maps. We argue that the Kaplan-Yorke dimension must be discontinuous at the transition and compare it to the correlation dimension. For a system of Bernoulli maps we indeed find a jump in the correlation dimension. The magnitude of the discontinuity in the Kaplan-Yorke dimension is calculated for networks of Bernoulli units as a function of the network size. Furthermore the scaling of the Kaplan-Yorke dimension as well as of the Kolmogorov entropy with system size and time delay is investigated. Finally, we study the change in the attractor dimension for systems with parameter mismatch. In the third and last part the linear response of synchronized chaotic systems to small external perturbations is studied. The distribution of the distances from the synchronization manifold, i.e., the deviations between two synchronized chaotic units due to external perturbations on the transmitted signal, is used as a measure of the linear response. It is calculated numerically and, for some special cases, analytically. Depending on the model parameters this distribution has power law tails in the region of synchronization leading to diverging moments. The linear response is also quantified by means of the bit error rate of a transmitted binary message which perturbs the synchronized system. The bit error rate is given by an integral over the distribution of distances and is studied numerically for Bernoulli, tent and logistic maps. It displays a complex nonmonotonic behavior in the region of synchronization. For special cases the distribution of distances has a fractal structure leading to a devil's staircase for the bit error rate as a function of coupling strength. The response to small harmonic perturbations shows resonances related to coupling and feedback delay times. A bi-directionally coupled chain of three units can completely filter out the perturbation. Thus the second moment and the bit error rate become zero.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Chaossynchronisation in Netzwerken mit zeitverzögerten Kopplungen. Ein Netzwerk chaotischer Einheiten kann isochron und vollständig synchronisieren, auch wenn der Austausch der Signale einer oder mehreren Verzögerungszeiten unterliegt. In einem Netzwerk identischer Einheiten hat sich als Stabilitätsanalyse die Methode der Master Stability Funktion von Pecora und Carroll etabliert. Diese entspricht für ein Netzwerk gekoppelter iterativer Bernoulli-Abbildungen Polynomen vom Grade der größten Verzögerungszeit. Das Stabilitätsproblem reduziert sich somit auf die Untersuchung der Nullstellen dieser Polynome hinsichtlich ihrer Lage bezüglich des Einheitskreises. Eine solche Untersuchung kann beispielsweise numerisch mit dem Schur-Cohn-Theorem erfolgen, doch auch analytische Ergebnisse lassen sich erzielen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden Bernoulli-Netzwerke mit einer oder mehreren zeitverzögerten Kopplungen und/oder Rückkopplungen untersucht. Hierbei werden Aussagen über Teile des Stabilitätsgebietes getroffen, welche unabhängig von den Verzögerungszeiten sind. Des Weiteren werden Aussagen zu Systemen gemacht, welche sehr große Verzögerungszeiten aufweisen. Insbesondere wird gezeigt, dass in einem Bernoulli-Netzwerk keine stabile Chaossynchronisation möglich ist, wenn die vorhandene Verzögerungszeit sehr viel größer ist als die Zeitskala der lokalen Dynamik, bzw. der Lyapunovzeit. Außerdem wird in bestimmten Systemen mit mehreren Verzögerungszeiten anhand von Symmetriebetrachtungen stabile Chaossynchronisation ausgeschlossen, wenn die Verzögerungszeiten in bestimmten Verhältnissen zueinander stehen. So ist in einem doppelt bidirektional gekoppeltem Paar ohne Rückkopplung und mit zwei verschiedenen Verzögerungszeiten stabile Chaossynchronisation nicht möglich, wenn die Verzögerungszeiten in einem Verhältnis von teilerfremden ungeraden ganzen Zahlen zueinander stehen. Es kann zudem Chaossynchronisation ausgeschlossen werden, wenn in einem bipartiten Netzwerk mit zwei großen Verzögerungszeiten zwischen diesen eine kleine Differenz herrscht. Schließlich wird ein selbstkonsistentes Argument vorgestellt, das das Auftreten von Chaossynchronisation durch die Mischung der Signale der einzelnen Einheiten interpretiert und sich unter anderem auf die Teilerfremdheit der Zyklen eines Netzes stützt. Abschließend wird untersucht, ob einige der durch die Bernoulli-Netzwerke gefundenen Ergebnisse sich auf andere chaotische Netzwerke übertragen lassen. Hervorzuheben ist die sehr gute Übereinstimmung der Ergebnisse eines Bernoulli-Netzwerkes mit den Ergebnissen eines gleichartigen Netzwerkes gekoppelter Halbleiterlasergleichungen, sowie die Übereinstimmungen mit experimentellen Ergebnissen eines Systems von Halbleiterlasern.
Over the last decade, the field of topological insulators has become one of the most vivid areas in solid state physics. This novel class of materials is characterized by an insulating bulk gap, which, in two-dimensional, time-reversal symmetric systems, is closed by helical edge states. The latter make topological insulators promising candidates for applications in high fidelity spintronics and topological quantum computing. This thesis contributes to bringing these fascinating concepts to life by analyzing transport through heterostructures formed by two-dimensional topological insulators in contact with metals or superconductors. To this end, analytical and numerical calculations are employed. Especially, a generalized wave matching approach is used to describe the edge and bulk states in finite size tunneling junctions on the same footing.
The numerical study of non-superconducting systems focuses on two-terminal metal/topological
insulator/metal junctions. Unexpectedly, the conductance signals originating from the bulk and
the edge contributions are not additive. While for a long junction, the transport is determined
purely by edge states, for a short junction, the conductance signal is built from both bulk and
edge states in a ratio, which depends on the width of the sample. Further, short junctions show
a non-monotonic conductance as a function of the sample length, which distinguishes the topologically non-trivial regime from the trivial one. Surprisingly, the non-monotonic conductance of the topological insulator can be traced to the formation of an effectively propagating solution, which is robust against scalar disorder.
The analysis of the competition of edge and bulk contributions in nanostructures is extended to transport through topological insulator/superconductor/topological insulator tunneling junctions. If the dimensions of the superconductor are small enough, its evanescent bulk modes
can couple edge states at opposite sample borders, generating significant and tunable crossed
Andreev reflection. In experiments, the latter process is normally disguised by simultaneous
electron transmission. However, the helical edge states enforce a spatial separation of both competing processes for each Kramers’ partner, allowing to propose an all-electrical measurement
of crossed Andreev reflection.
Further, an analytical study of the hybrid system of helical edge states and conventional superconductors in finite magnetic fields leads to the novel superconducting quantum spin Hall effect. It is characterized by edge states. Both the helicity and the protection against scalar disorder of these edge states are unaffected by an in-plane magnetic field. At the same time its superconducting gap and its magnetotransport signals can be tuned in weak magnetic fields, because the combination of helical edge states and superconductivity results in a giant g-factor. This is manifested in a non-monotonic excess current and peak splitting of the dI/dV characteristics as a function of the magnetic field. In consequence, the superconducting quantum spin Hall effect is an effective generator and detector for spin currents.
The research presented here deepens the understanding of the competition of bulk and edge
transport in heterostructures based on topological insulators. Moreover it proposes feasible experiments to all-electrically measure crossed Andreev reflection and to test the spin polarization of helical edge states.
The top quark plays an important role in current particle physics, from a theoretical point of view because of its uniquely large mass, but also experimentally because of the large number of top events recorded by the LHC experiments ATLAS and CMS, which makes it possible to directly measure the properties of this particle, for example its couplings to the other particles of the standard model (SM), with previously unknown precision. In this thesis, an effective field theory approach is employed to introduce a minimal and consistent parametrization of all anomalous top couplings to the SM gauge bosons and fermions which are compatible with the SM symmetries. In addition, several aspects and consequences of the underlying effective operator relations for these couplings are discussed. The resulting set of couplings has been implemented in the parton level Monte Carlo event generator WHIZARD in order to provide a tool for the quantitative assessment of the phenomenological implications at present and future colliders such as the LHC or a planned international linear collider. The phenomenological part of this thesis is focused on the charged current couplings of the top quark, namely anomalous contributions to the trilinear tbW coupling as well as quartic four-fermion contact interactions of the form tbff, both affecting single top production as well as top decays at the LHC. The study includes various aspects of inclusive cross section measurements as well as differential distributions of single tops produced in the t channel, bq → tq', and in the s channel, ud → tb. We discuss the parton level modelling of these processes as well as detector effects, and finally present the prospected LHC reach for setting limits on these couplings with 10 resp. 100 fb−1 of data recorded at √s = 14 TeV.
The idea that our observable Universe may have originated from a quantum tunneling event out of an eternally inflating false vacuum state is a cornerstone of the multiverse paradigm. Modern theories that are considered as an approach towards the ultraviolet-complete fundamental theory of particles and gravity, such as the various types of string theory, even suggest that a vast landscape of different vacuum configurations exists, and that gravitational tunneling is an important mechanism with which the Universe can explore this landscape. The tunneling scenario also presents a unique framework to address the initial conditions of our observable Universe. In particular, it allows to introduce deviations from the cosmological concordance model in a controlled and well-motivated way. These deviations are a central topic of this work. An important feature in most of the theories mentioned above is the presumed existence of additional space dimensions in excess of the three which we observe in our every-day experience. It was realized that these extra dimensions could avoid our detection if they are compactified to microscopic length scales far beyond the reach of current experiments. There also seem to be natural mechanisms available for dynamical compactification in those theories. These typically lead to a vast landscape of different vacuum configurations which also may differ in the number of macroscopic dimensions, only the total number of dimensions being determined by the theory. Transitions between these vacuum configurations may hence open up new directions which were previously compact, spontaneously compactify some previously macroscopic directions, or otherwise re-arrange the configuration of compact and macroscopic dimensions in a more general way. From within the bubble Universe, such a process may be perceived as an anisotropic background spacetime - intuitively, the dimensions which open up may give rise to preferred directions. If our 3+1 dimensional observable Universe was born in a process as described above, one may expect to find traces of a preferred direction in cosmological observations. For instance, two directions could be curved like on a sphere, while the third space direction is flat. Using a scenario of gravitational tunneling to fix the initial conditions, I show how the primordial signatures in such an anisotropic Universe can be obtained in principle and work out a particular example in more detail. A small deviation from isotropy also has phenomenological consequences for the later evolution of the Universe. I discuss the most important effects and show that backreaction can be dynamically important. In particular, under certain conditions, a buildup of anisotropic stress in different components of the cosmic fluid can lead to a dynamical isotropization of the total stress-energy tensor. The mechanism is again demonstrated with the help of a physical example.
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are among the brightest and most frequent sources on the extragalactic X-ray and gamma-ray sky. Their central supermassive blackhole generates an enormous luminostiy through accretion of the surrounding gas. A few AGN harbor highly collimated, powerful jets in which are observed across the entire electromagnetic spectrum. If their jet axis is seen in a small angle to our line-of-sight (these objects are then called blazars) jet emission can outshine any other emission component from the system. Synchrotron emission from electrons and positrons clearly prove the existence of a relativistic leptonic component in the jet plasma. But until today, it is still an open question whether heavier particles, especially protons, are accelerated as well. If this is the case, AGN would be prime candidates for extragalactic PeV neutrino sources that are observed on Earth. Characteristic signatures for protons can be hidden in the variable high-energy emission of these objects. In this thesis I investigated the broadband emission, particularly the high-energy X-ray and gamma-ray emission of jetted AGN to address open questions regarding the particle acceleration and particle content of AGN jets, or the evolutionary state of the AGN itself. For this purpose I analyzed various multiwavelength observations from optical to gamma-rays over a period of time using a combination of state-of-the-art spectroscopy and timing analysis. By nature, AGN are highly variable. Time-resolved spectral analysis provided a new dynamic view of these sources which helped to determine distinct emission processes that are difficult to disentangle from spectral or timing methods alone.
Firstly, this thesis tackles the problem of source classification in order to facilitate the search for interesting sources in large data archives and characterize new transient sources. I use spectral and timing analysis methods and supervised machine learning algorithms to design an automated source classification pipeline. The test and training sample were based on the third XMM-Newton point source catalog (3XMM-DR6). The set of input features for the machine learning algorithm was derived from an automated spectral modeling of all sources in the 3XMM-DR6, summing up to 137200 individual detections. The spectral features were complemented by results of a basic timing analysis as well as multiwavelength information provided by catalog cross-matches. The training of the algorithm and application to a test sample showed that the definition of the training sample was crucial: Despite oversampling minority source types with synthetic data to balance out the training sample, the algorithm preferably predicted majority source types for unclassified objects. In general, the training process showed that the combination of spectral, timing and multiwavelength features performed best with the lowest misclassification rate of \\sim2.4\\%.
The methods of time-resolved spectroscopy was then used in two studies to investigate the properties of two individual AGN, Mrk 421 and PKS 2004-447, in detail. Both objects belong to the class of gamma-ray emitting AGN. A very elusive sub-class are gamma-ray emitting Narrow Line Seyfert 1 (gNLS1) galaxies. These sources have been discovered as gamma-ray sources only recently in 2010 and a connection to young radio galaxies especially compact steep spectrum (CSS) radio sources has been proposed. The only gNLS1 on the Southern Hemisphere so far is PKS2004-447 which lies at the lower end of the luminosity distribution of gNLS1. The source is part of the TANAMI VLBI program and is regularly monitored at radio frequencies. In this thesis, I presented and analyzed data from a dedicated multiwavelength campaign of PKS 2004-447 which I and my collaborators performed during 2012 and which was complemented by individual observations between 2013 and 2016. I focussed on the detailed analysis of the X-ray emission and a first analysis of its broadband spectrum from radio to gamma-rays. Thanks to the dynamic SED I could show that earlier studies misinterpreted the optical spectrum of the source which had led to an underestimation of the high-energy emission and had ignited a discussion on the source class. I show that the overall spectral properties are consistent with dominating jet emission comprised of synchrotron radiation and inverse Compton scattering from accelerated leptons. The broadband emission is very similar to typical examples of a certain type of blazars (flat-spectrum radio quasars) and does not present any unusual properties in comparison. Interestingly, the VLBI data showed a compact jet structure and a steep radio spectrum consistent with a compact steep spectrum source. This classified PKS 2004-447 as a young radio galaxy, in which the jet is still developing.
The investigation of Mrk 421 introduced the blazar monitoring program which I and collaborator have started in 2014. By observing a blazar simultaneously from optical, X-ray and gamma-ray bands during a VHE outbursts, the program aims at providing extraordinary data sets to allow for the generation of a series of dynamical SEDs of high spectral and temporal resolution. The program makes use of the dense VHE monitoring by the FACT telescope. So far, there are three sources in our sample that we have been monitoring since 2014. I presented the data and the first analysis of one of the brightest and most variable blazar, Mrk 421, which had a moderate outbreak in 2015 and triggered our program for the first time. With spectral timing analysis, I confirmed a tight correlation between the X-ray and TeV energy bands, which indicated that these jet emission components are causally connected. I discovered that the variations of the optical band were both correlated and anti-correlated with the high-energy emission, which suggested an independent emission component. Furthermore, the dynamic SEDs showed two different flaring behaviors, which differed in the presence or lack of a peak shift of the low-energy emission hump. These results further supported the hypothesis that more than one emission region contributed to the broadband emission of Mrk 421 during the observations.
Overall,the studies presented in this thesis demonstrated that time-resolved spectroscopy is a powerful tool to classify both source types and emission processes of astronomical objects, especially relativistic jets in AGN, and thus provide a deeper understanding and new insights of their physics and properties.
The AdS/CFT correspondence is an explicit realization of the holographic principle. It describes a field theory living on the boundary of a volume by a gravitational theory living in the interior and vice-versa. With its origins in string theory, the correspondence incorporates an explicit relationship between the degrees of freedom of both theories: the AdS/CFT dictionary. One astonishing aspect of the AdS/CFT correspondence is the emergence of geometry from field theory.
On the gravity side, a natural way to probe the geometry is to study boundary-anchored extremal surfaces of different dimensionality. While there is no unified way to determine the field theory dual for such non-local quantities, the AdS/CFT dictionary contains entries for surfaces of certain dimensionality: it relates two-point functions to geodesics, the Wilson loop expectation value to two-dimensional surfaces and the entanglement entropy, i.e. a measure for entanglement between states in a region and in its complement, to co-dimension two surfaces in the bulk.
In this dissertation, we calculate these observables for gravity setups dual to thermal states in the field theory. The geometric dual is given by AdS Schwarzschild black holes in general dimensions. We find analytic results for minimal areas in this setup. One focus of our analysis is the high-temperature limit. The leading and subleading term in this limit have diverse interpretation for the different observables. For example, the subleading term of the entanglement entropy satisfies a c-theorem for renormalization flows and gives insights into the number of effective degrees of freedom.
The entanglement entropy emerged as the favorable way to probe the geometric dual. In addition to the extremal bulk surface, the holographic entanglement entropy associates a bulk region to the considered boundary region. The volume of this region is conjectured to be a measure of complexity, i.e. a measure of how difficult it is to obtain the corresponding field-theory state. Building on our aforementioned results for the entanglement entropy, we study this complexity for AdS Schwarzschild black holes in general dimensions.
In particular, we draw conclusions on how efficient holography encodes the field theory and compare these results to MERA tensor networks, a numerical tool to study quantum many-body systems.
Moreover, we holographically study the complexity of pure states. This sheds light on the notion of complexity in field theories. We calculate the complexity for a simple, calculable example: states obtained by conformal transformations of the vacuum state in AdS3/CFT2. In this lower-dimensional realization of AdS/CFT, the conformal group is infinite dimensional. We construct a continuous space of states with the same complexity as the vacuum state. Furthermore, we determine the change of complexity caused by small conformal transformation. The field-theory operator implementing this transformation is known and allows to compare the holographic results to field theory expectations.
In this thesis we discuss the potential of nanodevices based on topological insulators. This novel class of matter is characterized by an insulating bulk with simultaneously conducting boundaries. To lowest order, the states that are evoking the conducting behavior in TIs are typically described by a Dirac theory. In the two-dimensional case, together with time- reversal symmetry, this implies a helical nature of respective states. Then, interesting physics appears when two such helical edge state pairs are brought close together in a two-dimensional topological insulator quantum constriction. This has several advantages. Inside the constriction, the system obeys essentially the same number of fermionic fields as a conventional quantum wire, however, it possesses more symmetries. Moreover, such a constriction can be naturally contacted by helical probes, which eventually allows spin- resolved transport measurements.
We use these intriguing properties of such devices to predict the formation and detection of several profound physical effects. We demonstrate that narrow trenches in quantum spin Hall materials – a structure we coin anti-wire – are able to show a topological super- conducting phase, hosting isolated non-Abelian Majorana modes. They can be detected by means of a simple conductance experiment using a weak coupling to passing by helical edge states. The presence of Majorana modes implies the formation of unconventional odd-frequency superconductivity. Interestingly, however, we find that regardless of the presence or absence of Majoranas, related (superconducting) devices possess an uncon- ventional odd-frequency superconducting pairing component, which can be associated to a particular transport channel. Eventually, this enables us to prove the existence of odd- frequency pairing in superconducting quantum spin Hall quantum constrictions. The symmetries that are present in quantum spin Hall quantum constrictions play an essen- tial role for many physical effects. As distinguished from quantum wires, quantum spin Hall quantum constrictions additionally possess an inbuilt charge-conjugation symmetry. This can be used to form a non-equilibrium Floquet topological phase in the presence of a time-periodic electro-magnetic field. This non-equilibrium phase is accompanied by topological bound states that are detectable in transport characteristics of the system. Despite single-particle effects, symmetries are particularly important when electronic in- teractions are considered. As such, charge-conjugation symmetry implies the presence of a Dirac point, which in turn enables the formation of interaction induced gaps. Unlike single-particle gaps, interaction induced gaps can lead to large ground state manifolds. In combination with ordinary superconductivity, this eventually evokes exotic non-Abelian anyons beyond the Majorana. In the present case, these interactions gaps can even form in the weakly interacting regime (which is rather untypical), so that the coexistence with superconductivity is no longer contradictory. Eventually this leads to the simultaneous presence of a Z4 parafermion and a Majorana mode bound at interfaces between quantum constrictions and superconducting regions.
The standard model (SM) of particle physics is for the last three decades a very successful description of the properties and interactions of all known elementary particles. Currently, it is again probed with the first collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). It is widely expected that new physics will be detected at the LHC and the SM has to be extended. The most exhaustive analyzed extension of the SM is supersymmetry (SUSY). SUSY can not only solve intrinsic problems of the SM like the hierarchy problem, but it also postulates new particles which might explain the nature of dark matter in the universe. The majority of all studies about dark matter in the framework of SUSY has focused on the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM). The aim of this work is to consider scenarios beyond that scope. We consider two models which explain not only dark matter but also neutrino masses: the gravitino as dark matter in gauge mediated SUSY breaking (GMSB) with bilinear broken $R$-parity as well as different seesaw scenarios with the neutralino as dark matter candidate. Furthermore, we also study the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model (NMSSM) which solves the \(\mu\)-problem of the MSSM and discuss the properties of the neutralino as dark matter candidate. In case of $R$-parity violation, light gravitinos are often the only remaining candidate for dark matter in SUSY because of their very long life time. We reconsider the cosmological gravitino problem arising for this kind of models. It will be shown that the proposed solution for the overclosure of the universe by light gravitinos, namely the entropy production by decays of GMSB messenger, just works in a small subset of models and in fine-tuned regions of the parameter space. This is a consequence of two effects so far overlooked: the enhanced decay channels in massive vector bosons and the impact of charged messenger particles. Both aspects cause an interplay between different cosmological restrictions which lead to strong constraints on the parameters of GMSB models. Afterwards, a minimal supergravity (mSugra) scenario with additional chiral superfields at high energy scales is considered. These fields are arranged in complete $SU(5)$ multiplets in order to maintain gauge unification. The new fields generate a dimension 5 operator to explain neutrino data. Furthermore, they cause large differences in mass spectrum of MSSM fields because of the different evaluation of the renormalization group equations what changes also the properties of the lightest neutralino as dark matter candidate. We discuss the parameter space of all three possible seesaw scenarios with respect to dark matter and the impact on rare lepton flavor violating processes. As we will see, especially in seesaw type~III but also in type~II the mass spectrum and regions of parameter space consistent with dark matter differ significantly in comparison to a common mSugra scenario. Moreover, the experimental bounds, in particular of branching ratios like \(l_i \rightarrow l_j \gamma\), cause large constraints on the seesaw parameters.
In this thesis, the broad band emission, especially in the gamma-ray and radio band, of the active galaxy IC 310 located in the Perseus cluster of galaxies was investigated. The main experimental methods were Cherenkov astronomy using the MAGIC telescopes and high resolution very
long baseline interferometry (VLBI) at radio frequencies (MOJAVE, EVN). Additionally, data
of the object in different energy bands were studied and a multi-wavelength campaign has been
organized and conducted. During the campaign, an exceptional bright gamma-ray flare at TeV
energies was found with the MAGIC telescopes. The results were compared to theoretical acceleration and emission models for explaining the high energy radiation of active galactic nuclei. Many open questions regarding the particle acceleration to very high energies in the jets of active galactic nuclei, the particle content of the jets, or how the jets are launched, were addressed in this thesis by investigating the variability of IC 310 in the very high energy band.
It is argued that IC310 was originally mis-classified as a head-tail radio galaxy. Instead,
it shows a variability behavior in the radio, X-ray, and gamma-ray band similar to the one
found for blazars. These are active galactic nuclei that are characterized by flux variability in all observed energy bands and at all observed time scales. They are viewed at a small angle between the jet axis and the line-of-sight. Thus, strong relativistic beaming influences the variability properties of blazars. Observations of IC 310 with the European VLBI Network helped to find limits for the angle between the jet axis and the line-of-sight, namely 10 deg - 20 deg. This places IC 310 at the borderline between radio galaxies (larger angles) and blazars (smaller angles).
During the gamma-ray outburst detected at the beginning of the multi-wavelength campaign, flux variability as short as minutes was measured. The spectrum during the flare can be described by a simple power-law function over two orders of magnitude in energy up to ~10 TeV. Compared to previous observations, no significant variability of the spectral shape was found. Together with the constraint on the viewing angle, this challenges the currently accepted models for particle acceleration at shock waves in the jets. Alternative models, such as stars moving through the jets, mini-jets in the jet caused, e.g., by reconnection events, or gap acceleration in a pulsar-like magnetosphere around the black hole were investigated. It was found that only the latter can explain all observational findings, which at least suggests that it could even be worthwhile to reconsider published investigations of AGN with this new knowledge in mind.
The first multi-wavelength campaign was successfully been conducted in 2012/2013, including
ground-based as well as space-based telescopes in the radio, optical, ultraviolet, X-ray, and
gamma-ray energy range. No pronounced variability was found after the TeV flare in any energy band. The X-ray data showed a slightly harder spectrum when the emission was brighter. The long-term radio light curve indicated a flickering flux variability, but no strong hint for a
new jet component was found from VLBI images of the radio jet. In any case, further analysis of the existing multi-wavelength data as well as complimentary measurements could provide further exciting insights, e.g., about the broad band spectral energy distribution.
Overall, it can be stated that IC 310 is a key object for research of active galactic nuclei in
the high-energy band due to its proximity and its peculiar properties regarding flux variability
and spectral behavior. Such objects are ideally suited for studying particle acceleration, jet
formation, and other physical effects and models which are far from being fully understood.
This thesis deals with quantum Monte Carlo simulations of correlated low dimensional electron systems. The correlation that we have in mind is always given by the Hubbard type electron electron interaction in various settings. To facilitate this task, we develop the necessary methods in the first part. We develop the continuous time interaction expansion quantum algorithm in a manner suitable for the treatment of effective and non-equilibrium problems. In the second part of this thesis we consider various applications of the algorithms. First we examine a correlated one-dimensional chain of electrons that is subject to some form of quench dynamics where we suddenly switch off the Hubbard interaction. We find the light-cone-like Lieb-Robinson bounds and forms of restricted equilibration subject to the conserved quantities. Then we consider a Hubbard chain subject to Rashba spin-orbit coupling in thermal equilibrium. This system could very well be realized on a surface with the help of metallic adatoms. We find that we can analytically connect the given model to a model without spin-orbit coupling. This link enabled us to interpret various results for the standard Hubbard model, such as the single-particle spectra, now in the context of the Hubbard model with Rashba spin-orbit interaction. And finally we have considered a magnetic impurity in a host consisting of a topological insulator. We find that the impurity still exhibits the same features as known from the single impurity Anderson model. Additionally we study the effects of the impurity in the bath and we find that in the parameter regime where the Kondo singlet is formed the edge state of the topological insulator is rerouted around the impurity.
The topic of this PhD thesis is the combination of topologically non-trivial phases with correlation effects stemming from Coulomb interaction between the electrons in a condensed matter system. Emphasis is put on both emerging benefits as well as hindrances, e.g. concerning the topological protection in the presence of strong interactions.
The physics related to topological effects is established in Sec. 2. Based on the topological band theory, we introduce topological materials including Chern insulators, topological insulators in two and three dimensions as well as Weyl semimetals. Formalisms for a controlled treatment of Coulomb correlations are presented in Sec. 3, starting with the topological field theory. The Random Phase Approximation is introduced as a perturbative approach, while in the strongly interacting limit the theory of quantum Hall ferromagnetism applies. Interactions in one dimension are special, and are treated through the Luttinger liquid description. The section ends with an overview of the expected benefits offered by the combination of topology and interactions, see Sec. 3.3.
These ideas are then elaborated in the research part. In Chap. II, we consider weakly interacting 2D topological insulators, described by the Bernevig-Hughes-Zhang model. This is applicable, e.g., to quantum well structures made of HgTe/CdTe or InAs/GaSb. The bulk band structure is here a mixture stemming from linear Dirac and quadratic Schrödinger fermions. We study the low-energy excitations in Random Phase Approximation, where a new interband plasmon emerges due to the combined Dirac and Schrödinger physics, which is absent in the separate limits. Already present in the undoped limit, one finds it also at finite doping, where it competes with the usual intraband plasmon. The broken particle-hole symmetry in HgTe quantum wells allows for an effective separation of the two in the excitation spectrum for experimentally accessible parameters, in the right range for Raman or electron loss spectroscopy. The interacting bulk excitation spectrum shows here clear differences between the topologically trivial and topologically non-trivial regime. An even stronger signal in experiments is expected from the optical conductivity of the system. It thus offers a quantitative way to identify the topological phase of 2D topological insulators from a bulk measurement.
In Chap. III, we study a strongly interacting system, forming an ordered, quantum Hall ferromagnetic state. The latter can arise also in weakly interacting materials with an applied strong magnetic field. Here, electrons form flat Landau levels, quenching the kinetic energy such that Coulomb interaction can be dominant. These systems define the class of quantum Hall topological insulators: topologically non-trivial states at finite magnetic field, where the counter-propagating edge states are protected by a symmetry (spatial or spin) other than time-reversal. Possible material realizations are 2D topological insulators like HgTe heterostructures and graphene. In our analysis, we focus on the vicinity of the topological phase transition, where the system is in a strongly interacting quantum Hall ferromagnetic state. The bulk and edge physics can be described by a nonlinear \sigma-model for the collective order parameter of the ordered state. We find that an emerging, continuous U(1) symmetry offers topological protection. If this U(1) symmetry is preserved, the topologically non-trivial phase persists in the presence of interactions, and we find a helical Luttinger liquid at the edge. The latter is highly tunable by the magnetic field, where the effective interaction strength varies from weakly interacting at zero field, K \approx 1, to diverging interaction strength at the phase transition, K -> 0.
In the last Chap. IV, we investigate whether a Weyl semimetal and a 3D topological insulator phase can exist together at the same time, with a combined, hybrid surface state at the joint boundaries. An overlap between the two can be realized by Coulomb interaction or a spatial band overlap of the two systems. A tunnel coupling approach allows us to derive the hybrid surface state Hamiltonian analytically, enabling a detailed study of its dispersion relation. For spin-symmetric coupling, new Dirac nodes emerge out of the combination of a single Dirac node and a Fermi arc. Breaking the spin symmetry through the coupling, the dispersion relation is gapped and the former Dirac node gets spin-polarized. We propose experimental realizations of the hybrid physics, including compressively strained HgTe as well as heterostructures of topological insulator and Weyl semimetal materials, connected to each other, e.g., by Coulomb interaction.
The last years have witnessed an exciting scientific quest for intriguing topological phenomena in time-dependent quantum systems. A key to many manifestations of topology in dynamical systems relies on the effective dimensional extension by time-periodic drives. An archetypal example is provided by the Thouless pump in one spatial dimension, where a robust and quantized charge transport can be described in terms of an integer quantum Hall effect upon interpreting time as an extra dimension. Generalizing this fundamental concept to multifrequency driving, a variety of higher-dimensional topological models can be engineered in dynamical synthetic dimensions, where the underlying topological classification leads to quantized pumping effects in the associated lower-dimensional time-dependent systems.
In this Thesis, we explore how correlations profoundly impact the topological features of dynamical synthetic quantum materials. More precisely, we demonstrate that the interplay of interaction and dynamical synthetic dimension gives rise to striking topological phenomena that go beyond noninteracting implementations. As a starting point, we exploit the Floquet counterpart of an integer quantum Hall scenario, namely a two-level system driven by two incommensurate frequencies. In this model, the topologically quantized response translates into a process in which photons of different frequencies are exchanged between the external modes, referred to as topological frequency conversion. We extend this prototypical setup to an interacting version, focusing on the minimal case of two correlated spins equally exposed to the external drives. We show that the topological invariant determining the frequency conversion can be changed by odd integers, something explicitly forbidden in the noninteracting limit of two identical spins. This correlated topological feature may, in turn, result in an enhancement of the quantized response.
Robust response signals, such as those predicted for the topological frequency converter, are of fundamental interest for potential technological applications of topological quantum matter. Based on an open quantum system implementation of the frequency converter, we propose a novel mechanism of topological quantization coined ''topological burning glass effect''. Remarkably, this mechanism amplifies the local response of the driven two-level system by an integer that is proportional to the number of environmental degrees of freedom to which the system is strongly coupled. Specifically, our findings are illustrated by the extension of the frequency converter to a central spin model. There, the local energy transfer mediated exclusively by the central spin is significantly enhanced by the collective motion of the surrounding spins. In this sense, the central spin adopts the topological nature of the total system in its non-unitary dynamics, taking into account the correlations with the environment.
This thesis is concerned with the description of macroscopic geometries through Loop Quantum Gravity, and there particularly with the description of cosmology within full Loop Quantum Gravity. For this purpose we depart from two distinct (classically virtually equivalent) ansätze: One is phase space reduction and the other is the restriction to particular states. It turns out that the quantum analogue of these two approaches are fundamentally different: The quantum analogue of phase space reduction needs the reformulation in terms of the observable Poisson algebra, so it can be applied to the noncommutative quantum phase space: It rests on the observation that the observable Poisson algebra of classical canonical cosmology is induced by the embedding of the reduced cosmological phase space into the phase space of full General Relativity. Using techniques related to Rieffel-induction, we develop a construction for a noncommutative embedding that has a classical limit that is described by a Poisson embedding. To be able to use this class of noncommutative embeddings for Loop Quantum Gravity, one needs a complete group of diffeomorphisms for the quantum theory, which is constructed. These two results are applied to construct a quantum embedding of a cosmological sector into full Loop Quantum Gravity. The embedded cosmological sector turns out to be discrete, like standard Loop Quantum Cosmology and can be interpreted as a super-selection sector thereof; however due to pathologies of the dynamics of full Loop Quantum Gravity, one can not induce a meaningful dynamics for this cosmological sector. The quantum analogue of restricting the space of states is achieved by explicitly constructing states for Loop Quantum Gravity with smooth geometry. These states do not exist within the Hilbert space of Loop Quantum Gravity, but as states on the observable algebra of Loop Quantum Gravity. This observable algebra is built from spin network functions, area operators and a restricted set of fluxes. For this algebra to be physically complete, we needed to construct a version of Loop Quantum Geometry based on a fundamental area operator. This version of Loop Quantum Geometry is constructed. Since the smooth geometry states are not in the Hilbert space of standard Loop Quantum Gravity, we needed to calculate the Hilbert space representation that contains them using the GNS construction. This representation of the observable algebra can be illustrated as a classical condensate of geometry with quantum fluctuations thereon. Using these representations we construct a quantum-minisuperspace, which allows for an interpretation of standard Loop Quantum Cosmology in terms of these states and led us to conjecture a new approach for the implementation of dynamics for Loop Quantum Gravity.
In this thesis we analyze CP violating effects of MSSM phases in production and two-body decays of neutralinos, charginos and sfermions. For different supersymmetric processes we define and calculate CP-odd asymmetries, which base on triple products. We present numerical results for electron-positron collisions at a future linear collider with a center of mass energy of 500-800 GeV, high luminosity and longitudinally polarized beams.
Clearly, in nature, but also in technological applications, complex systems built in an entirely ordered and regular fashion are the exception rather than the rule. In this thesis we explore how critical phenomena are influenced by quenched spatial randomness. Specifically, we consider physical systems undergoing a continuous phase transition in the presence of topological disorder, where the underlying structure, on which the system evolves, is given by a non-regular, discrete lattice. We therefore endeavour to achieve a thorough understanding of the interplay between collective dynamics and quenched randomness.
According to the intriguing concept of universality, certain laws emerge from collectively behaving many-body systems at criticality, almost regardless of the precise microscopic realization of interactions in those systems. As a consequence, vastly different phenomena show striking similarities at their respective phase transitions. In this dissertation we pursue the question of whether the universal properties of critical phenomena are preserved when the system is subjected to topological perturbations. For this purpose, we perform numerical simulations of several prototypical systems of statistical physics which show a continuous phase transition. In particular, the equilibrium spin-1/2 Ising model and its generalizations represent -- among other applications -- fairly natural approaches to model magnetism in solids, whereas the non-equilibrium contact process serves as a toy model for percolation in porous media and epidemic spreading. Finally, the Manna sandpile model is strongly related to the concept of self-organized criticality, where a complex dynamic system reaches a critical state without fine-tuning of external variables.
Our results reveal that the prevailing understanding of the influence of topological randomness on critical phenomena is insufficient. In particular, by considering very specific and newly developed lattice structures, we are able to show that -- contrary to the popular opinion -- spatial correlations in the number of interacting neighbours are not a key measure for predicting whether disorder ultimately alters the behaviour of a given critical system.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein dreidimensionaler vollrelativistischer und parallelisierter Particle-in-Cell Code geschrieben, ausführlich getestet und angewandt. Der Code ACRONYM ist variabel einsetzbar und von der Genauigkeit und Stabilität her State-of-the-Art und somit konkurrenzfähig zu den sonstigen in der Astrophysik eingesetzten Codes anderer Gruppen. Die Energie bleibt bis auf einen Fehler von < 0.03% erhalten, die Divergenz des Magnetfeldes bleibt immer unter einem Wert von 10^{-12} und die Skalierung wurde mittlerweile bis zu einem Clustergröße von einigen 10000 CPUs getestet. In dieser Arbeit wurde dann, nach der Entwicklung des Codes, der Einfluss des fundamentalen Massenverhältnisses m_p/m_e auf die Teilchenbeschleunigung durch Plasmainstabilitäten untersucht. Dies ist relevant und wichtig, da in PiC-Simulationen in den allermeisten Fällen nicht mit dem realen Massenverhältnis gerechnet wird, da sonst viel zu viel Rechenleistung benötigt würde, um zu sehen, was mit den Protonen geschieht und was ihr Einfluss auf die leichten Teilchen wie Elektronen und Positronen ist. Zu diesem Zweck wurden Simulationen mit Massenverhältnissen zwischen m_p/m_e = 1.0 und 200.0 durchgeführt. Diese haben alle gemeinsam, dass periodische Randbedingungen verwendet wurden und das zur Verfügung stehende Simulationsgebiet mit jeweils zwei gegeneinander strömenden Plasmapopulationen vollständig gefüllt wurde, um jegliche Art von auftretenden Schocks auszuschließen. Die Rohdaten der einzelnen Simulationen wurden auf vielfältige Art und Weise analysiert, es wurden z.B. Schnitte durch die Teilchenverteilung erstellt, sowie ein- oder zweidimensionale Histogramme und Energieverläufe betrachtet. Dabei haben sich folgende Kernpunkte ergeben: Für Massenverhältnisse bis etwa m_p/m_e = 20 bildet sich die gesamte Zweistrom-Instabilität in nur einer Phase aus, das heißt, es bilden sich von ringförmigen Magnetfeldern umgebene Flussschläuche aus, die dann verschmelzen, bis nur noch zwei übrig sind und alle Teilchen werden über den gesamten Verlauf der Instabilität beschleunigt. Es ist damit zu folgern, dass die unterschiedlich schweren Teilchenspezies Protonen und Elektronen/Positronen durch die relativ nahe beieinander liegenden Massen noch so stark gekoppelt sind, dass sich nur eine Instabilität entwickeln kann. Bei großen Massenverhältnissen (m_p/m_e > 20) ist eine deutliche Trennung in zwei Phasen der Instabilität zu erkennen. Zuerst bilden sich wiederum Flussschläuche aus, diese verschmelzen miteinander (zu zweien oder mehr), bevor der erste Teil der Instabilität abflaut. Anschließend entstehen wieder ringförmige Magnetfelder und Flussschläuche, von denen einer meist deutlich stärker ist als all die anderen, das bedeutet, dass dieser von stärkeren Magnetfeldern umgeben ist und eine höhere Teilchendichte aufweist. Im Rahmen dieser zweigeteilten Instabilität werden die Elektronen und Positronen nur in der ersten Phase signifikant beschleunigt, die deutlich schwereren Protonen gewinnen über den gesamten Zeitraum Energie. Die höchstenergetischen Teilchen erreichen im Ruhesystem der jeweiligen Plasmapopulation Werte um gamma = 250. Man kann daraus für zukünftige Untersuchungen mit Hilfe von Particle-in-Cell Codes den Schluss ziehen, dass Rückschlüsse auf das tatsächliche Verhalten beim realen Massenverhältnis von m_p/m_e = 1836.2 nur aus den Simulationen mit m_p/m_e >> 20 gezogen werden können, da die starke Kopplung der leichten und schweren Teilchen bei kleineren Massenverhältnissen die Ergebnisse sehr stark beeinflusst. Es wurde anhand der gemessenen Zeitpunkte der Instabilitätsmaxima eine Extrapolation durchgeführt, die zeigt, dass die Instabilität beim realen Massenverhältnis etwa bei t = 1400 omega_{pe}^{-1} auftreten würde. Um dies wirklich zu simulieren müsste allerdings mehr als die 1000-fache Anzahl an CPU-Stunden aufgewandt werden. Des weiteren wurde eine Maxwell-Jüttner-Verteilung an die Teilchenverteilungen der einzelnen Simulationen auf dem Höhepunkt der Instabilität gefittet, um sowohl die neue Temperatur des Plasmas als auch die Beschleunigungseffizienz des Prozesses zu berechnen. Die Temperatur erhöht sich demnach durch die Instabilität von etwa 10^8K auf 10^{10} bis 10^{11}K, der Anteil suprathermischer Teilchen beträgt 2 bis 4%.
20 years after the discovery of the Crab Nebula as a source of very high energy gamma-rays, the number of sources newly discovered above 100 GeV using ground-based Cherenkov telescopes has considerably grown, at the time of writing of this thesis to a total of 81. The sources are of different types, including galactic sources such as supernova remnants, pulsars, binary systems, or so-far unidentified accelerators and extragalactic sources such as blazars and radio galaxies. The goal of this thesis work was to search for gamma-ray emission from a particular type of blazars previously undetected at very high gamma-ray energies, by using the MAGIC telescope. Those blazars previously detected were all of the same type, the so-called high-peaked BL Lacertae objects. The sources emit purely non-thermal emission, and exhibit a peak in their radio-to-X-ray spectral energy distribution at X-ray energies. The entire blazar population extends from these rare, low-luminosity BL Lacertae objects with peaks at X-ray energies to the much more numerous, high-luminosity infrared-peaked radio quasars. Indeed, the low-peaked sources dominate the source counts obtained from space-borne observations at gamma-ray energies up to 10 GeV. Their spectra observed at lower gamma-ray energies show power-law extensions to higher energies, although theoretical models suggest them to turn over at energies below 100 GeV. This opened the quest for MAGIC as the Cherenkov telescope with the currently lowest energy threshold. In the framework of this thesis, the search was focused on the prominent sources BL Lac, W Comae and S5 0716+714, respectively. Two of the sources were unambiguously discovered at very high energy gamma-rays with the MAGIC telescope, based on the analysis of a total of about 150 hours worth of data collected between 2005 and 2008. The analysis of this very large data set required novel techniques for treating the effects of twilight conditions on the data quality. This was successfully achieved and resulted in a vastly improved performance of the MAGIC telescope in monitoring campaigns. The detections of low-peaked and intermediate-peaked BL Lac objects are in line with theoretical expectations, but push the models based on electron shock acceleration and inverse-Compton cooling to their limits. The short variability time scales of the order of one day observed at very high energies show that the gamma-rays originate rather close to the putative supermassive black holes in the centers of blazars, corresponding to less than 1000 Schwarzschild radii when taking into account relativistic bulk motion.
Topological insulators are electronic phases that insulate in the bulk and accommodate a peculiar, metallic edge liquid with a spin-dependent dispersion.
They are regarded to be of considerable future use in spintronics and for quantum computation.
Besides determining the intrinsic properties of this rather novel electronic phase, considering its combination with well-known physical systems can generate genuinely new physics.
In this thesis, we report on such combinations including topological insulators. Specifically, we analyze an attached Rashba impurity, a Kondo dot in the two channel setup, magnetic impurities on the surface of a strong three-dimensional topological insulator, the proximity coupling of the latter system to a superconductor, and hybrid systems consisting of a topological insulator and a semimetal.
Let us summarize our primary results.
Firstly, we determine an analytical formula for the Kondo cloud and describe its possible detection in current correlations far away from the Kondo region.
We thereby rely on and extend the method of refermionizable points.
Furthermore, we find a class of gapless topological superconductors and semimetals, which accommodate edge states that behave similarly to the ones of globally gapped topological phases. Unexpectedly, we also find edge states that change their chirality when affected by sufficiently strong disorder.
We regard the presented research helpful in future classifications and applications of systems containing topological insulators, of which we propose some examples.
This thesis aims at a description of the equilibrium dynamics of quantum spin glass systems. To this end a generic fermionic SU(2), spin 1/2 spin glass model with infinite-range interactions is defined in the first part. The model is treated in the framework of imaginary-time Grassmann field theory along with the replica formalism. A dynamical two-step decoupling procedure, which retains the full time dependence of the (replica-symmetric) saddle point, is presented. As a main result, a set of highly coupled self-consistency equations for the spin-spin correlations can be formulated. Beyond the so-called spin-static approximation two complementary systematic approximation schemes are developed in order to render the occurring integration problem feasible. One of these methods restricts the quantum-spin dynamics to a manageable number of bosonic Matsubara frequencies. A sequence of improved approximants to some quantity can be obtained by gradually extending the set of employed discrete frequencies. Extrapolation of such a sequence yields an estimate of the full dynamical solution. The other method is based on a perturbative expansion of the self-consistency equations in terms of the dynamical correlations. In the second part these techniques are applied to the isotropic Heisenberg spin glass both on the Fock space (HSGF) and, exploiting the Popov-Fedotov trick, on the spin space (HSGS). The critical temperatures of the paramagnet to spin glass phase transitions are determined accurately. Compared to the spin-static results, the dynamics causes slight increases of T_c by about 3% and 2%, respectively. For the HSGS the specific heat C(T) is investigated in the paramagnetic phase and, by way of a perturbative method, below but close to T_c. The exact C(T)-curve is shown to exhibit a pronounced non-analyticity at T_c and, contradictory to recent reports by other authors, there is no indication of maximum above T_c. In the last part of this thesis the spin glass model is augmented with a nearest-neighbor hopping term on an infinite-dimensional cubic lattice. An extended self-consistency structure can be derived by combining the decoupling procedure with the dynamical CPA method. For the itinerant Ising spin glass numerous solutions within the spin-static approximation are presented both at finite and zero temperature. Systematic dynamical corrections to the spin-static phase diagram in the plane of temperature and hopping strength are calculated, and the location of the quantum critical point is determined.
Diese Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit Strahlungsprozessen in Blazaren. Bei den Blazaren handelt es sich um eine Unterkategorie der aktiven Galaxienkerne, bei denen die Jetachse in Richtung des Beobachters zeigt. Charakteristisch für die Blazare ist ein Multifrequenzspektrum der Photonen, welches sich vom Radiobereich bis hin zur Gamma-Strahlung mit TeV-Energien erstreckt. Insbesondere der Gamma-Bereich rückt aktuell in den Fokus der Betrachtung mit Experimenten wie zum Beispiel FERMI und MAGIC. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist die Modellierung der auftretenden Strahlungsprozesse und die Beschreibung der Multifrequenzspektren der Blazare mit Hilfe eines hadronisch-leptonischen Modells. Grundlage hierfür ist ein selbstkonsistentes Synchrotron-Selbst-Compton-Modell (SSC), welches zur Beschreibung des Spektrums der Quelle 1 ES 1218+30.4 verwendet wird. Dabei wird die Parameterwahl unterstützt durch eine Abschätzung der Masse des zentralen schwarzen Loches. Das hier behandelte SSC-Modell wird dahingehend untersucht, wie es sich unter Veränderung der Modellparameter verhält. Dabei werden Abhängigkeiten des Photonenspektrums von Änderungsfaktoren der Parameter abgeleitet. Außerdem werden diese Abhängigkeiten in Relation gesetzt und aus dieser Betrachtung ergibt sich die Schlussfolgerung, dass unter der Voraussetzung eines festen Spektralindex der Elektronenverteilung die Wahl eines Parametersatzes zur Modellierung eines Photonenspektrums eindeutig ist. Zur Einführung eines zeitabhängigen, hadronischen Modells wird das SSCModell um die Anwesenheit nichtthermischer Protonen erweitert. Dadurch kann Proton-Synchrotron-Strahlung einen Beitrag im Gamma-Bereich leisten. Außerdem werden durch Proton-Photon-Wechselwirkung Pionen erzeugt. Aus deren Zerfall werden zusammen mit der Paarbildung aus Photon-Photon-Absorption sekundäre Elektronen und Positronen produziert, die wiederum zum Hochenergiespektrum beitragen. Neben den Pionen werden bei der Proton-Photon- Wechselwirkung außerdem noch Neutrinos und Neutronen erzeugt, die einen direkten Einblick in die Emissionsregion erlauben. Das hier vorgestellte hadronische Modell wird auf die Quelle 3C 279 angewandt. Für diese Quelle reicht mit der Detektion im VHE-Bereich der SSCAnsatz nicht aus, um das Photonenspektrum zu beschreiben. Mit dem vorgelegten Modell gelingt die Beschreibung des Spektrums in den SSC-kritischen Bereichen sehr gut. Insbesondere können verschiedene Flusszustände modelliert und allein durch Veränderung der Maximalenergien von Protonen und Elektronen ineinander überführt werden. Diese einfache Möglichkeit der Modellierung der Variabilität der Quelle unterstreicht die Wahl des hadronischen Ansatzes. Somit wird hier ein sehr gutes Werkzeug zur Untersuchung der Emissionsprozesse in Blazaren geliefert. Darüber hinaus ist mit der Abschätzung des Neutrino-Flusses zwar die Detektion von 3C 279 als Punktquelle mit IceCube unwahrscheinlich, jedoch liefert das Modell generell die Möglichkeit im Kontext des Multimessenger-Ansatzes Antworten zu liefern. Im gleichen Kontext wird auch der Beitrag zur kosmischen Strahlung durch entweichende Neutronen untersucht.
In the last decade continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo in the hybridization expansion (CTHYB) was one of the most successful Monte Carlo techniques to describe correlated quantum phenomena in conjunction with dynamical mean field theory (DMFT). The first part of the thesis consists of algorithmical developments regarding CTHYB and DMFT. I provide a complete derivation and an extensive discussion of the expansion formula. We generalized it to treat spin-orbit coupling, and invented the superstate sampling algorithm to make it efficient enough for describing systems with general interactions, crystal fields and spin-orbit coupling at low temperatures. But CTHYB is known to fail in the standard implementation for equal-time correlators, certain higher-order Green’s functions and the atomic limit; we discovered that its estimator for the Greens function is also inconsistent for Anderson impurities with finite, discrete baths. I focus then on further improvements of CTHYB that we have conceived and worked on, in particular for f-orbitals and for taking physical symmetries into account in the calculation of the Monte Carlo observables. The second part of the thesis presents selected physical applications of these methods. I show DMFT calculations of highest accuracy for elemental iron and nickel and discover a new mechanism of magnetic ordering in nickel: the ordering of band structure-induced local moments. Then we analyze the stability of this phenomenon under pressure and temperatures, that characterize in the Earth’s core. We find, that the mechanism survives these conditions and may give a significant contribution to the generation of the Earth’s magnetic field. The next topic is the stability of double Dirac fermions against electronic correlations. We find, that the Coulomb interaction in the corresponding material Bi2 CuO4 are strong enough to destroy the double Dirac cone, and substantial uniform pressure is necessary to restore them. In the last chapter I derive the properties of Higgs and Goldstone bosons from Ginzburg-Landau theory, and identify these excitations in a model of an excitonic magnet.
Emergent phenomena in condensed matter physics like, e.g., magnetism, superconductivity, or non-trivial topology often come along with a surprise and exert great fascination to researchers up to this day. Within this thesis, we are concerned with the analysis of associated types of order that arise due to strong electronic interactions and focus on the high-\(T_c\) cuprates and Kondo systems as two prime candidates. The underlying many-body problem cannot be solved analytically and has given rise to the development of various approximation techniques to tackle the problem.
In concrete terms, we apply the auxiliary particle approach to investigate tight-binding Hamiltonians subject to a Hubbard interaction term to account for the screened Coulomb repulsion. Thereby, we adopt the so-called Kotliar-Ruckenstein slave-boson representation that reduces the problem to non-interacting quasiparticles within a mean-field approximation. Part I provides a pedagogical review of the theory and generalizes the established formalism to encompass Gaussian fluctuations around magnetic ground states as a crucial step to obtaining novel results.
Part II addresses the two-dimensional one-band Hubbard model, which is known to approximately describe the physics of the high-\(T_c\) cuprates that feature high-temperature superconductivity and various other exotic quantum phases that are not yet fully understood. First, we provide a comprehensive slave-boson analysis of the model, including the discussion of incommensurate magnetic phases, collective modes, and a comparison to other theoretical methods that shows that our results can be massively improved through the newly implemented fluctuation corrections. Afterward, we focus on the underdoped regime and find an intertwining of spin and charge order signaled by divergences of the static charge susceptibility within the antiferromagnetic domain. There is experimental evidence for such inhomogeneous phases in various cuprate materials, which has recently aroused interest because such correlations are believed to impact the formation of Cooper pairs. Our analysis identifies two distinct charge-ordering vectors, one of which can be attributed to a Fermi-surface nesting effect and quantitatively fits experimental data in \(\mathrm{Nd}_{2-\mathrm{x}}\mathrm{Ce}_\mathrm{x}\mathrm{CuO}_4\) (NCCO), an electron-doped cuprate compound. The other resembles the so-called Yamada relation implying the formation of periodic, double-occupied domain walls with a crossover to phase separation for small dopings.
Part III investigates Kondo systems by analyzing the periodic Anderson model and its generalizations. First, we consider Kondo metals and detect weakly magnetized ferromagnetic order in qualitative agreement with experimental observations, which hinders the formation of heavy fermions. Nevertheless, we suggest two different parameter regimes that could host a possible Kondo regime in the context of one or two conduction bands. The part is concluded with the study of topological order in Kondo insulators based on a three-dimensional model with centrosymmetric spin-orbit coupling. Thereby, we classify topologically distinct phases through appropriate \(\mathbb{Z}_2\) invariants and consider paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic mean-field ground states. Our model parameters are chosen to specifically describe samarium hexaboride (\(\mbox{SmB}_6\)), which is widely believed to be a topological Kondo insulator, and we identify topologically protected surface states in agreement with experimental evidence in that material. Moreover, our theory predicts the emergence of an antiferromagnetic topological insulator featuring one-dimensional hinge-states as the signature of higher-order topology in the strong coupling regime. While the nature of the true ground state is still under debate, corresponding long-range magnetic order has been observed in pressurized or alloyed \(\mbox{SmB}_6\), and recent experimental findings point towards non-trivial topology under these circumstances. The ability to understand and control topological systems brings forth promising applications in the context of spintronics and quantum computing.
Mergers between rich clusters of galaxies represent the most violent events in the Universe. The merger events initiate a complex chain of processes that leads to the dissipation of the collisional energy. This phase of violent relaxation is accompanied by turbulence and shock waves as well as non-thermal particle acceleration. This thesis aims at the interpretation of multi-wavelength observations of the merging cluster of galaxies Abell 3376 in the framework of a theoretical model of the involved effects. Observations with the Very Large Array radio interferometer were carried out and analyzed to clarify the morphology of the non-thermal particle distribution in Abell 3376, in particular about the shocked regions. The dissipation in the hot intra-cluster gas was studied using archival X-ray observations with ROSAT and XMM. Results were compared with constrained numerical simulations of the evolution of the merger process in the framework of cosmological structure formation. For this purpose, the ENZO-Code was employed for the computation of the gas dynamics and self-gravity of the colliding mass distribution. The non-thermal properties of the intra-cluster gas could be indirectly inferred from the local Mach number and the strength of the turbulence.
This thesis deals with nanoelectromechanical systems in the quantum regime. Nanoelectromechanical systems are systems where a mechanical degree of freedom of rather macroscopic size is coupled to an electronic degree of freedom. The mechanical degree of freedom can without any constraints be modeled as the fundamental mode of a harmonic oscillator. Due to their size and the energy scales involved in the setting, quantum mechanics plays an important role in their description. We investigate transport through such nanomechanical devices where our focus lies on the quantum regime. We use non-equilibrium methods to fully cover quantum effects in setups where the mechanical oscillator is part of a tunnel junction. In such setups, the mechanical motion influences the tunneling amplitude and thereby the transport properties through the device. The electronics in these setups can then be used to probe and characterize the mechanical oscillator through signatures in transport quantities such as the average current or the current noise. The interplay between the mechanical motion and other physical degrees of freedom can also be used to characterize these other degrees of freedom, i.e., the nanomechanical oscillator can be used as a detector. In this thesis, we will show that a nanomechanical oscillator can be used as a detector for rather exotic degrees of freedom, namely Majorana bound states which recently attracted great interest, theoretically as well as experimentally. Again, the quantum regime plays an essential role in this topic. One of the major manifestations of quantum mechanics is entanglement between two quantum systems. Entanglement of quantum systems with few (discrete) degrees of freedom is a well established and understood subject experimentally as well as theoretically. Here, we investigate quantum entanglement between two macroscopic continuous variable systems. We study different setups where it is possible to entangle two nanomechanical oscillators which are not directly coupled to each other. We conclude with reviewing the obtained results and discuss open questions and possible future developments on the quantum aspects of nanomechanical systems.
The quantum Hall (QH) effect, which can be induced in a two-dimensional (2D) electron gas by an external magnetic field, paved the way for topological concepts in condensed matter physics. While the QH effect can for that reason not exist without Landau levels, there is a plethora of topological phases of matter that can exist even in the absence of a magnetic field. For instance, the quantum spin Hall (QSH), the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH), and the three-dimensional (3D) topological insulator (TI) phase are insulating phases of matter that owe their nontrivial topology to an inverted band structure. The latter results from a strong spin-orbit interaction or, generally, from strong relativistic corrections. The main objective of this thesis is to explore the fate of these preexisting topological states of matter, when they are subjected to an external magnetic field, and analyze their connection to quantum anomalies. In particular, the realization of the parity anomaly in solid state systems is discussed. Furthermore, band structure engineering, i.e., changing the quantum well thickness, the strain, and the material composition, is employed to manipulate and investigate various topological properties of the prototype TI HgTe.
Like the QH phase, the QAH phase exhibits unidirectionally propagating metallic edge channels. But in contrast to the QH phase, it can exist without Landau levels. As such, the QAH phase is a condensed matter analog of the parity anomaly. We demonstrate that this connection facilitates a distinction between QH and QAH states in the presence of a magnetic field. We debunk therefore the widespread belief that these two topological phases of matter cannot be distinguished, since they are both described by a $\mathbb{Z}$ topological invariant. To be more precise, we demonstrate that the QAH topology remains encoded in a peculiar topological quantity, the spectral asymmetry, which quantifies the differences in the number of states between the conduction and valence band. Deriving the effective action of QAH insulators in magnetic fields, we show that the spectral asymmetry is thereby linked to a unique Chern-Simons term which contains the information about the QAH edge states. As a consequence, we reveal that counterpropagating QH and QAH edge states can emerge when a QAH insulator is subjected to an external magnetic field. These helical-like states exhibit exotic properties which make it possible to disentangle QH and QAH phases. Our findings are of particular importance for paramagnetic TIs in which an external magnetic field is required to induce the QAH phase.
A byproduct of the band inversion is the formation of additional extrema in the valence band dispersion at large momenta (the `camelback'). We develop a numerical implementation of the $8 \times 8$ Kane model to investigate signatures of the camelback in (Hg,Mn)Te quantum wells. Varying the quantum well thickness, as well as the Mn-concentration, we show that the class of topologically nontrivial quantum wells can be subdivided into direct gap and indirect gap TIs. In direct gap TIs, we show that, in the bulk $p$-regime, pinning of the chemical potential to the camelback can cause an onset to QH plateaus at exceptionally low magnetic fields (tens of mT). In contrast, in indirect gap TIs, the camelback prevents the observation of QH plateaus in the bulk $p$-regime up to large magnetic fields (a few tesla). These findings allowed us to attribute recent experimental observations in (Hg,Mn)Te quantum wells to the camelback. Although our discussion focuses on (Hg,Mn)Te, our model should likewise apply to other topological materials which exhibit a camelback feature in their valence band dispersion.
Furthermore, we employ the numerical implementation of the $8\times 8$ Kane model to explore the crossover from a 2D QSH to a 3D TI phase in strained HgTe quantum wells. The latter exhibit 2D topological surface states at their interfaces which, as we demonstrate, are very sensitive to the local symmetry of the crystal lattice and electrostatic gating. We determine the classical cyclotron frequency of surface electrons and compare our findings with experiments on strained HgTe.
In this PhD thesis, the fingerprints of geometry and topology on low dimensional mesoscopic systems are investigated. In particular, holographic non-equilibrium transport properties of the quantum spin Hall phase, a two dimensional time reversal symmetric bulk insulating phase featuring one dimensional gapless helical edge modes are studied. In these metallic helical edge states, the spin and the direction of motion of the charge carriers are locked to each other and counter-propagating states at the same energy are conjugated by time reversal symmetry. This phenomenology entails a so called topological protection against elastic single particle backscattering by time reversal symmetry. We investigate the limitations of this topological protection by studying the influence of inelastic processes as induced by the interplay of phonons and extrinsic spin orbit interaction and by taking into account multi electron processes due to electron-electron interaction, respectively. Furthermore, we propose possible spintronics applications that rely on a spin charge duality that is uniquely associated with the quantum spin Hall phase. This duality is present in the composite system of two helical edge states with opposite helicity as realized on the two opposite edges of a quantum spin Hall sample with ribbon geometry. More conceptually speaking, the quantum spin Hall phase is the first experimentally realized example of a symmetry protected topological state of matter, a non-interacting insulating band structure which preserves an anti-unitary symmetry and is topologically distinct from a trivial insulator in the same symmetry class with totally localized and hence independent atomic orbitals. In the first part of this thesis, the reader is provided with a fairly self-contained introduction into the theoretical concepts underlying the timely research field of topological states of matter. In this context, the topological invariants characterizing these novel states are viewed as global analogues of the geometric phase associated with a cyclic adiabatic evolution. Whereas the detailed discussion of the topological invariants is necessary to gain deeper insight into the nature of the quantum spin Hall effect and related physical phenomena, the non-Abelian version of the local geometric phase is employed in a proposal for holonomic quantum computing with spin qubits in quantum dots.
In the past few years, two-dimensional quantum liquids with fractional excitations have been a topic of high interest due to their possible application in the emerging field of quantum computation and cryptography. This thesis is devoted to a deeper understanding of known and new fractional quantum Hall states and their stabilization in local models. We pursue two different paths, namely chiral spin liquids and fractionally quantized, topological phases.
The chiral spin liquid is one of the few examples of spin liquids with fractional statistics. Despite its numerous promising properties, the microscopic models for this state proposed so far are all based on non-local interactions, making the experimental realization challenging. In the first part of this thesis, we present the first local parent Hamiltonians, for which the Abelian and non-Abelian chiral spin liquids are the exact and, modulo a topological degeneracy, unique ground states. We have developed a systematic approach to find an annihilation operator of the chiral spin liquid and construct from it a many-body interaction which establishes locality. For various system sizes and lattice geometries, we numerically find largely gapped eigenspectra and confirm to an accuracy of machine precision the uniqueness of the chiral spin liquid as ground state of the respective system. Our results provide an exact spin model in which fractional quantization can be studied.
Topological insulators are one of the most actively studied topics in current condensed matter physics research. With the discovery of the topological insulator, one question emerged: Is there an interaction-driven set of fractionalized phases with time reversal symmetry? One intuitive approach to the theoretical construction of such a fractional topological insulator is to take the direct product of a fractional quantum Hall state and its time reversal conjugate. However, such states are well studied conceptually and do not lead to new physics, as the idea of taking a state and its mirror image together without any entanglement between the states has been well understood in the context of topological insulators. Therefore, the community has been looking for ways to implement some topological interlocking between different spin species. Yet, for all practical purposes so far, time reversal symmetry has appeared to limit the set of possible fractional states to those with no interlocking between the two spin species.
In the second part of this thesis, we propose a new universality class of fractionally quantized, topologically ordered insulators, which we name “fractional insulator”. Inspired by the fractional quantum Hall effect, spin liquids, and fractional Chern insulators, we develop a wave function approach to a new class of topological order in a two-dimensional crystal of spin-orbit coupled electrons. The idea is simply to allow the topological order to violate time reversal symmetry, while all locally observable quantities remain time reversal invariant. We refer to this situation as “topological time reversal symmetry breaking”. Our state is based on the Halperin double layer states and can be viewed as a two-layer system of an ↑-spin and a ↓-spin sphere. The construction starts off with Laughlin states for the ↑-spin and ↓-spin electrons and an interflavor term, which creates correlations between the two layers. With a careful parameter choice, we obtain a state preserving time reversal symmetry locally, and label it the “311-state”. For systems of up to six ↑-spin and six ↓-spin electrons, we manage to construct an approximate parent Hamiltonian with a physically realistic, local interaction.
Die Untersuchung stark korrelierter Elektronensysteme anhand des zweidimensionalen Hubbard-Modells bildet das zentrale Thema dieser Arbeit. Wir analysieren das Schicksal des Mott-Isolators bei Dotierung als auch bei Reduzierung der Wechselwirkungsstärke. Die numerische Auswertung erfolgt mit Hilfe von Quanten-Cluster-Approximationen, die eine thermodynamisch konsistente Beschreibung der Grundzustandseigenschaften garantieren. Der hier verwendete Rahmen der Selbstenergiefunktional-Theorie bietet eine große Flexibilität bei der Konstruktion von Cluster-Näherungen. Eine detaillierte Analyse gibt Aufschluss über die Qualität und das Konvergenzverhalten unterschiedlicher Cluster-Näherungen innerhalb der Selbstenergiefunktional-Theorie. Wir verwenden für diese Untersuchungen das eindimensionale Hubbard-Modell und vergleichen unsere Resultate mit der exakten Lösung. In zwei Dimensionen finden wir als Grundzustand des Teilchen-Loch-symmetrischen Modells bei Halbfüllung einen antiferromagnetischen Isolator unabhängig von der Wechselwirkungsstärke. Die Berücksichtigung kurzreichweitiger räumlicher Korrelationen durch unsere Cluster-Näherung führt, im Vergleich mit der dynamischen Mean-Field-Theorie, zu einer deutlichen Verbesserung des antiferromagnetischen Ordnungsparameters. Darüberhinaus beobachten wir in der paramagnetischen Phase einen Metall-Isolator-Übergang als Funktion der Wechselwirkungsstärke, der sich qualitativ vom reinen Mean-Field-Szenario unterscheidet. Ausgehend vom antiferromagnetischen Mott-Isolator zeigt sich ein füllungsgetriebener Metall-Isolator-Übergang in eine paramagnetische metallische Phase. Abhängig von der verwendeten Cluster-Approximation tritt dabei zunächst eine antiferromagnetische metallische Phase auf. Neben langreichweitiger antiferromagnetischer Ordnung haben wir in unseren Rechnungen auch Supraleitung berücksichtigt. Das Verhalten des supraleitenden Ordnungsparameters als Funktion der Dotierung ist dabei in guter Übereinstimmung sowohl mit anderen numerischen Verfahren als auch mit experimentellen Ergebnissen.
The topic of this thesis is generalizations of the Anti de Sitter/Conformal Field Theory (AdS/CFT) correspondence, often referred to as holography, and their application to models relevant for condensed matter physics. A particular virtue of AdS/CFT is to map strongly coupled quantum field theories, for which calculations are inherently difficult, to more tractable classical gravity theories. I use this approach to study the crossover between Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) and the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) superconductivity mechanism. I also study the phase transitions between the AdS black hole and AdS soliton spacetime in the presence of disorder. Moreover, I consider a holographic model of a spin impurity interacting with a strongly correlated electron gas, similar to the Kondo model.
In AdS/CFT, the BEC/BCS crossover is modeled by a soliton configuration in the dual geometry and we study the BEC and BCS limits. The backreaction of the matter field on the background geometry is considered, which provides a new approach to study the BEC/BCS crossover. The behaviors of some physical quantities such as depletion of charge density under different strength of backreaction are presented and discussed. Moreover, the backreaction enables us to obtain the effective energy density of the soliton configurations, which together with the surface tension of the solitons leads to an argument for the occurrence of so called snake instability for dark solitons, i.e. for the solitons to form a vortex-like structures.
Disordering strongly coupled and correlated quantum states of matter may lead to new insights into the physics of many body localized (MBL) strongly correlated states, which may occur in the presence of strong disorder. We are interested in potential insulator-metal transitions induced by disorder, and how disorder affects the Hawking-Page phase transition in AdS gravity in general. We introduce a metric ansatz and numerically construct the corresponding disordered AdS soliton and AdS black hole solutions, and discuss the calculation of the free energy in these states.
In the Kondo effect, the rise in resistivity in metals with scarce magnetic impurities at low temperatures can be explained by the RG flow of the antiferromagnetic coupling between the impurity and conduction electrons in CFT. The generalizations to SU(N) in the large N limit make the treatment amenable to the holographic approach. We add a Maxwell term to a previously existing holographic model to study the conductivity of the itinerant electrons. Our goal is to find the log(T) behavior in the DC resistivity. In the probe limit, we introduce junction conditions to connect fields crossing the defect. We then consider backreactions, which give us a new metric ansatz and new junction conditions for the gauge fields.
In this thesis I explore the interplay of geometry and quantum information theory via the holographic principle, with a specific focus on geometric phases in quantum systems like two interacting qubits, and how they relate to entanglement measures and Hilbert space factorisation. I establish geometric phases as an indicator for Hilbert space factorsiation, both in an abstract sense using von Neumann operator algebras as well as applied to the eternal black hole within the AdS/CFT correspondence. For the latter case I show that geometric phases allow to diagnose non-factorisation from a boundary point of view. I also introduce geometric quantum discord as a second geometric measure for non-factorisation and reveals its potential implications for the study of black hole microstates.
Hard X-ray Properties of Relativistically Beamed Jets from Radio- and Gamma-Ray-Bright Blazars
(2022)
In this work I characterize the hard X-ray properties of blazars, active galactic nuclei with highly beamed emission, which are notoriously hard to detect in this energy range. I employ pre-defined samples of beamed AGN: the radio-selected MOJAVE and TANAMI samples, as well as the most recent gamma-ray-selected Fermi/LAT 4LAC catalog. The hard X-ray data is extracted from the 105-month all-sky survey maps of the Swift/BAT (Burst Alert Telescope) in the energy band of 20 keV to 100 keV. A great majority of both the MOJAVE and TANAMI samples are significantly detected, with signal-to noise ratios of the sources often just below the X-ray catalog signal thresholds. All blazar sub-types (FSRQs, BL Lacs) and radio galaxies show characteristic ranges of X-ray flux, luminosity, and photon index. Their properties are correlated with the corresponding SED's shape / peak frequency. The LogN-LogS distributions of the samples show a scarcity of blazars in the middle and lower X-ray flux range, indicating differing evolutionary paths between radio and X-ray emission, which is also suggested by the corresponding luminosity functions. Compared to the radio samples, the 4LAC sources are on average significantly less bright in the BAT band since this range often coincides with the spectral gap region between the two big SED emission bumps. Also, the spectral shapes differ notably, especially for the sub-type of BL Lacs. Using the parameter space of X-ray and gamma-ray photon indices, 35 blazar candidate sources can be assigned to either the FSRQ or BL Lac type with high certainty. The reason why many blazars are weak in this energy band can be traced back to a number of factors: the selection bias of the initial sample, differential evolution of the X-rays and the wavelengths in which the sample is defined, and the limited sensitivity of the observing instruments.
This work presents the first ILT observations of high redshift blazars and their study in terms of jet evolution, morphology, and interaction with the surrounding medium. Each of these represents a highly topical area of astronomywith a large number of open questions. To better understand Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) and their fundamental inner workings, new techniques are needed to exploit the full potential of the next generation of radio interferometers. Some of these tools are presented here and applied to one of the latest generation of software radio telescopes. A major focus of the studies presented is on the unification model, where the observed blazars are discussed for their properties to be rotated counterparts of Fanaroff-Riley Class II (FR-II) radio galaxies, when classified as Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars (FSRQs). In addition, multiwavelength information has been included in the analysis. Both studies are feasibility studies that will serve as a basis for future similar studies. The characteristics discussed and their interpretation do not allow conclusions to be drawn for their respective populations. However, by applying them to a larger number of targets, population studies will be possible. The first chapters introduce the necessary topics, AGN, principles of radio observations and ILT, in the necessary depth to provide the reader with a solid knowledge base. They are particularly important for understanding the current limits and influences of uncertainties in the observation, calibration and imaging process. But they also shed light on realistic future improvements. A particular focus is on the development and evolution of the LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR)-Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) pipeline. With the tools at hand, the first study addresses the high redshift blazar S5 0836+710 $(z=2.218)$, which has been observed at various wavelengths and resolutions. It has a disrupted one-sided jet with an associated extended region further out. Despite the excellent wavelength coverage, only the additional ILT observations provided a complete picture of the source. With the data, the extended region could be classified as a hotspot moving at slightly relativistic speeds.. With the ILT data it was also possible to extract the flux of the core region of the AGN, and in projection to reveal the mixed counter-hotspot behind it. This also allowed constraints on jet parameters and environmental properties to be modelled, which were previously inconclusive. Technically, this study shows that the ILT can be used as an effective VLBI array for compact sources with small angular scales. However, the detection of faint components beyond redshifts of $z=2$ may require the capabilities of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) to provide a significant number of detections to enable statistical conclusions. The second study uses a much improved calibration pipeline to analyse the high redshift blazar GB1508+5714 $(z=4.30)$. The ILT data revealed a previously unseen component in the eastern direction. A spectral index map was generated from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) data, showing spectral index values of $-1.2_{-0.2}^{+0.4}$ for the western component, steeper than $-1.1$ for the eastern region, and $0.023 \pm 0.007$ for the core. Using the information provided by the ILT observation, as well as multi-wavelength information from other observations ranging from the long radio wavelengths to the $\gamma$ regime, four models were developed to interpret the observed flux with different emission origins. This also allowed to test a proposed interaction channel of the electrons provided by the jet, to cool off via inverse compton scattering with the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) photons, rather than by the usual synchrotron emission. This is referred to as cmb quenching in the literature, which could be shown in the study, to be necessary in any case. Finally, one of the four models was considered in which the hotspots in the detected components are unresolved and mixed by the lobe emission, with the X-ray emission coming from the lobes and partially mixed by the bright core region. The results of this preferred model are consistent with hotspots in a state of equipartition and lobes almost so. The study shows that high redshift blazars can be studied with the ILT, and expanding the sample of high redshift blazars resolved at multiple frequencies will allow a statistical study of the population. Finally, this work successfully demonstrates the powerful capabilities of the ILT to address questions that were previously inaccessible. The current state of the LOFAR-VLBI pipeline, when properly executed, allows work on the most challenging objects and will only improve in the future. In particular, this gives a glimpse of the possibilities that SKA will bring to astronomy.
The celebrated AdS/CFT dualities provide a window to strongly-coupled quantum field theories (QFTs), which are realized in nature at the most fundamental level on the one hand, but are hardly accessible for the standard mathematical tools on the other hand. The prototype examples of AdS/CFT relate classical supergravity theories on (d+1)-dimensional anti-de Sitter space (AdS) to strongly-coupled d-dimensional conformal field theories (CFTs). The AdS spacetimes admit a timelike conformal boundary, on which the dual CFT is defined. In that sense the AdS/CFT dualities are holographic, and this new approach has led to remarkable progress in understanding strongly-coupled QFTs defined on Minkowski space and on the Einstein cylinder. On the other hand, the study of QFT on more generic curved spacetimes is of fundamental interest and non-trivial already for free theories. Moreover, understanding the properties of gravity as a quantum theory remains among the hardest problems to solve in physics. Both of these issues can be studied holographically and we investigate here generalizations of AdS/CFT involving on the lower-dimensional side QFTs on curved backgrounds and as a further generalization gravity. In the first part we expand on the holographic description of QFT on fixed curved backgrounds, which involves gravity on an asymptotically-AdS space with that prescribed boundary structure. We discuss geometries with de Sitter and AdS as conformal boundary to holographically describe CFTs on these spacetimes. After setting up the procedure of holographic renormalization we study the reflection of CFT unitarity properties in the dual bulk description. The geometry with AdS on the boundary exhibits a number of interesting features, mainly due to the fact that the boundary itself has a boundary. We study both cases and resolve potential tensions between the unitarity properties of the bulk and boundary theories, which would be incompatible with a duality. The origin of these tensions is partly in the structure of the geometry with AdS conformal boundary, while another one arises for a particular limiting case where the bulk and boundary descriptions naively disagree. Besides technical challenges, the hierarchy of boundaries for the geometry with AdS conformal boundary offers an interesting option. Namely, having the dual theory on the conformal boundary itself defined on an AdS space offers the logical possibility of implementing a second instance of AdS/CFT. We discuss an appropriate geometric setting allowing for the notion of the boundary of a boundary and identify limitations for such multi-layered dualities. In the second part we consider five-dimensional supergravities whose solutions can be lifted to actual string-theory backgrounds. We work out the asymptotic structure of the theories on asymptotically-AdS spaces and calculate the Weyl anomaly of the dual CFTs. These holographic calculations confirm the expectations from the field-theory side and provide a non-trivial test of the AdS/CFT conjecture. Moreover, building on the previous results we show that in addition to the usual Dirichlet also more general boundary conditions can be imposed. That allows to promote the boundary metric to a dynamical quantity and is expected to yield a holographic description for a conformal supergravity on the boundary. The boundary theory obtained this way exhibits pathologies such as perturbative ghosts, which is in fact expected for a conformal gravity. The fate of these ghosts beyond perturbation theory is an open question and our setting provides a starting point to study it from the string-theory perspective. That discussion leads to a regime where the holographic description of the boundary theory requires quantization of the bulk supergravity. A necessary ingredient of any supergravity is a number of gravitinos as superpartners of the graviton, for which we thus need an effective-QFT description to make sense of AdS/CFT beyond the limit where bulk theory becomes classical. In particular, quantization should be possible not only on rigid AdS, but also on generic asymptotically-AdS spacetimes which may not be Einstein. In the third part we study the quantization and causality properties of the gravitino on Friedmann-Robertson-Walker spacetimes to explicitly show that a consistent quantization can be carried out also on non-Einstein spaces, in contrast to claims in the recent literature. Furthermore, this reveals interesting non-standard effects for the gravitino propagation, which in certain cases is restricted to regions more narrow than the expected light cones.
In this thesis we consider the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method for simulations of the Hubbard and Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model. In the first instance, we discuss the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method for the Hubbard model on a square lattice. We point out potential ergodicity issues and provide a way to circumvent them by a complexification of the method. Furthermore, we compare the efficiency of the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method with a well established determinantal quantum Monte Carlo method for simulations of the half-filled Hubbard model on square lattices. One reason why the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method loses the comparison is that we do not observe the desired sub-quadratic scaling of the numerical effort. Afterwards we present a formulation of the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method for the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model in two dimensions. Electron-phonon models like this are in general very hard to simulate using other Monte Carlo methods in more than one dimensions. It turns out that the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method is much better suited for this model . We achieve favorable scaling properties and provide a proof of concept. Subsequently, we use the hybrid quantum Monte Carlo method to investigate the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model in detail at half-filling in two dimensions. We present numerical data for staggered valence bond order at small phonon frequencies and an antiferromagnetic order at high frequencies. Due to an O(4) symmetry the antiferromagnetic order is connected to a superconducting charge density wave. Considering the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model without tight-binding hopping reveals an additional unconstrained Z_2 gauge theory. In this case, we find indications for π-fluxes and a possible Z_2 Dirac deconfined phase as well as for a columnar valence bond ordered state at low phonon energies. In our investigations of the several phase transitions we discuss the different possibilities for the underlying mechanisms and reveal first insights into a rich phase diagram.
We employ the AdS/CFT correspondence and hydrodynamics to analyze the transport properties of \(2+1\) dimensional electron fluids. In this way, we use theoretical methods from both condensed matter and high-energy physics to derive tangible predictions that are directly verifiable in experiment.
The first research topic we consider is strongly-coupled electron fluids. Motivated by early results by Gurzhi on the transport properties of weakly coupled fluids, we consider whether similar properties are manifest in strongly coupled fluids. More specifically, we focus on the hydrodynamic tail of the Gurzhi effect: A decrease in fluid resistance with increasing temperature due to the formation of a Poiseuille flow of electrons in the sample. We show that the hydrodynamic tail of the Gurzhi effect is also realized in strongly coupled and fully relativistic fluids, but with modified quantitative features. Namely, strongly-coupled fluids always exhibit a smaller resistance than weakly coupled ones and are, thus, far more efficient conductors. We also suggest that the coupling dependence of the resistance can be used to measure the coupling strength of the fluid. In view of these measurements, we provide analytical results for the resistance as a function of the shear viscosity over entropy density \(\eta/s\) of the fluid. \(\eta/s\) is itself a known function of the coupling strength in the weak and infinite coupling limits.
In further analysis for strongly-coupled fluids, we propose a novel strongly coupled Dirac material based on a kagome lattice, Scandium-substituted Herbertsmithite (ScHb). The large coupling strength of this material, as well as its Dirac nature, provides us with theoretical and experimental access to non-perturbative relativistic and quantum critical physics. A highly suitable method for analyzing such a material's transport properties is the AdS/CFT correspondence. Concretely, using AdS/CFT we derive an estimate for ScHb's \(\eta/s\) and show that it takes a value much smaller than that observed in weakly coupled materials. In turn, the smallness of \(\eta/s\) implies that ScHb's Reynolds number, \(Re\), is large. In fact, \(Re\) is large enough for turbulence, the most prevalent feature of fluids in nature, to make its appearance for the first time in electronic fluids.
Switching gears, we proceed to the second research topic considered in this thesis: Weakly coupled parity-breaking electron fluids. More precisely, we analyze the quantitative and qualitative changes to the classical Hall effect, for electrons propagating hydrodynamically in a lead. Apart from the Lorentz force, a parity-breaking fluid's motion is also impacted by the Hall-viscous force; the shear-stress force induced by the Hall-viscosity. We show that the interplay of these two forces leads to a hydrodynamic Hall voltage with non-linear dependence on the magnetic field. More importantly, the Lorentz and Hall-viscous forces become equal at a non-vanishing magnetic field, leading to a trivial hydrodynamic Hall voltage. Moreover, for small magnetic fields we provide analytic results for the dependence of the hydrodynamic Hall voltage on all experimentally-tuned parameters of our simulations, such as temperature and density. These dependences, along with the zero of the hydrodynamic Hall voltage, are distinct features of hydrodynamic transport and can be used to verify our predictions in experiments.
Last but not least, we consider how a distinctly electronic property, spin, can be included into the hydrodynamic framework. In particular, we construct an effective action for non-dissipative spin hydrodynamics up to first order in a suitably defined derivative expansion. We also show that interesting spin-transport effects appear at second order in the derivative expansion. Namely, we show that the fluid's rotation polarizes its spin. This is the hydrodynamic manifestation of the Barnett effect and provides us with an example of hydrodynamic spintronics.
To conclude this thesis, we discuss several possible extensions of our research, as well as proposals for research in related directions.
In recent years many discoveries have been made that reveal a close relation between quantum information and geometry in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence. In this duality between a conformal quantum field theory (CFT) and a theory of gravity on Anti-de Sitter spaces (AdS) quantum information quantities in CFT are associated with geometric objects in AdS. Subject of this thesis is the examination of this intriguing property of AdS/CFT. We study two central elements of quantum information: subregion complexity -- which is a measure for the effort required to construct a given reduced state -- and the modular Hamiltonian -- which is given by the logarithm of a considered reduced state.
While a clear definition for subregion complexity in terms of unitary gates exists for discrete systems, a rigorous formulation for quantum field theories is not known.
In AdS/CFT, subregion complexity is proposed to be related to certain codimension one regions on the AdS side.
The main focus of this thesis lies on the examination of such candidates for gravitational duals of subregion complexity.
We introduce the concept of \textit{topological complexity}, which considers subregion complexity to be given by the integral over the Ricci scalar of codimension one regions in AdS. The Gauss-Bonnet theorem provides very general expressions for the topological complexity of CFT\(_2\) states dual to global AdS\(_3\), BTZ black holes and conical defects. In particular, our calculations show that the topology of the considered codimension one bulk region plays an essential role for topological complexity.
Moreover, we study holographic subregion complexity (HSRC), which associates the volume of a particular codimension one bulk region with subregion complexity. We derive an explicit field theory expression for the HSRC of vacuum states. The formulation of HSRC in terms of field theory quantities may allow to investigate whether this bulk object indeed provides a concept of subregion complexity on the CFT side. In particular, if this turns out to be the case, our expression for HSRC may be seen as a field theory definition of subregion complexity. We extend our expression to states dual to BTZ black holes and conical defects.
A further focus of this thesis is the modular Hamiltonian of a family of states \(\rho_\lambda\) depending on a continuous parameter \(\lambda\). Here \(\lambda\) may be associated with the energy density or the temperature, for instance.
The importance of the modular Hamiltonian for quantum information is due to its contribution to relative entropy -- one of the very few objects in quantum information with a rigorous definition for quantum field theories.
The first order contribution in \(\tilde{\lambda}=\lambda-\lambda_0\) of the modular Hamiltonian to the relative entropy between \(\rho_\lambda\) and a reference state \(\rho_{\lambda_0}\) is provided by the first law of entanglement. We study under which circumstances higher order contributions in \(\tilde{\lambda}\) are to be expected.
We show that for states reduced to two entangling regions \(A\), \(B\) the modular Hamiltonian of at least one of these regions is expected to provide higher order contributions in \(\tilde{\lambda}\) to the relative entropy if \(A\) and \(B\) saturate the Araki-Lieb inequality. The statement of the Araki-Lieb inequality is that the difference between the entanglement entropies of \(A\) and \(B\) is always smaller or equal to the entanglement entropy of the union of \(A\) and \(B\).
Regions for which this inequality is saturated are referred to as entanglement plateaux. In AdS/CFT the relation between geometry and quantum information provides many examples for entanglement plateaux. We apply our result to several of them, including large intervals for states dual to BTZ black holes and annuli for states dual to black brane geometries.
Indirect Search for Dark Matter in the Universe - the Multiwavelength and Multiobject Approach
(2011)
Cold dark matter constitutes a basic tenet of modern cosmology, essential for our understanding of structure formation in the Universe. Since its first discovery by means of spectroscopic observations of the dynamics of the Coma cluster some 80 years ago, mounting evidence of its gravitational pull and its impact on the geometry of space-time has build up across a wide range of scales, from galaxies to the entire Hubble flow. The apparent lack of electromagnetic coupling and independent measurements of the energy density of baryonic matter from the primordial abundances of light elements show the non-baryonic nature of dark matter, and its clustering properties prove that it is cold, i.e. that it has a temperature lower than its mass during the time of radiation-matter equality. A generic particle candidate for cold dark matter are weakly interacting massive particles at the electroweak symmetry-breaking scale, such as the neutralinos in R-parity conserving supersymmetry. Such particles would naturally freeze-out with a cosmologically relevant relic density at early times in the expanding Universe. Subsequent clustering of matter would recover annihilation interactions between the dark matter particles to some extent and thus lead to potentially observable high-energy emission from the decaying unstable secondaries produced in annihilation events. The spectra of the secondaries would permit a determination of the mass and annihilation cross section, which are crucial for the microphysical identification of the dark matter. This the central motivation for indirect dark matter searches. However, presently neither the indirect searches, nor the complementary direct searches based on the detection of elastic scattering events, nor the production of candidate particles in collider experiments, has yet provided unequivocal evidence for dark matter. This does not come as a surprise, since the dark matter particles interact only through weak interactions and therefore the corresponding secondary emission must be extremely faint. It turns out that even for the strongest mass concentrations in the Universe, the dark matter annihilation signal is expected to not exceed the level of competing astrophysical sources. Thus, the discrimination of the putative dark matter annihilation signal from the signals of the astrophysical inventory has become crucial for indirect search strategies. In this thesis, a novel search strategy will be developed and exemplified in which target selection across a wide range of masses, astrophysical background estimation, and multiwavelength signatures play the key role. It turns out that the uncertainties regarding the halo profile and the boost due to surviving substructure are bigger for halos at the lower end of the observed mass scales, i.e. in the regime of dwarf galaxies and below, while astrophysical backgrounds tend to become more severe for massive dark matter halos such as clusters of galaxies. By contrast, the uncertainties due to unknown details of particle physics are invariant under changes of the halo mass. Therefore, the different scaling behaviors can be employed to significantly cut down on the uncertainties in observations of different targets covering a major part of the involved mass scales. This strategical approach was implemented in the scientific program carried out with the MAGIC telescope system. Observations of dwarf galaxies and the Virgo- and Perseus clusters of galaxies have been carried out and, at the time of writing, result in some of the most stringent constraints on weakly interacting massive particles from indirect searches. Here, the low-threshold design of the MAGIC telescope system plays a crucial role, since the bulk of the high-energy photons, produced with a high multiplicity during the fragmentation of unstable dark matter annihilation products, are emitted at energies well below the dark matter mass scale. The upper limits severely constrain less generic, but more prolific scenarios characterized by extraordinarily high annihilation efficiencies.
This dissertation employs gauge/gravity duality to investigate features
of ( 2 + 1 ) -dimensional quantum gravity in Anti-de Sitter space (AdS)
and its relation to conformal field theory (CFT) in 1 + 1 dimensions.
Concretely, we contribute to research on the frontier of gauge/gravity
with condensed matter as well as the frontier with quantum informa-
tion.
The first research topic of this thesis is motivated by the Kondo
model, which describes the screening of magnetic impurities in metals
by conduction electrons at low temperatures. This process has a de-
scription in the language of string theory via fluctuating surfaces in
spacetime, called branes. At high temperatures the unscreened Kondo
impurity is modelled by a stack of pointlike branes. At low tempera-
tures this stack condenses into a single spherical, two-dimensional brane
which embodies the screened impurity.
This thesis demonstrates how this condensation process is naturally
reinvoked in the holographic D1/D5 system. We find brane configu-
rations mimicking the Kondo impurities at high and low energies and
establish the corresponding brane condensation, where the brane grows
two additional dimensions. We construct supergravity solutions, which
fully take into account the effect of the brane on its surrounding space-
time before and after the condensation takes place. This enables us
to compute the full impurity entropies through which we confirm the
validity of the g-theorem.
The second research topic is rooted in the connection of geometry
with quantum information. The motivation stems from the “complexity
equals volume” proposal, which relates the volume of wormholes to
the cicruit complexity of a thermal quantum state. We approach this
proposal from a pragmatic point of view by studying the properties of
certain volumes in gravity and their description in the CFT.
We study subregion complexities, which are the volumes of the re-
gions subtended by Ryu-Takayanagi (RT) geodesics. On the gravity
side we reveal their topological properties in the vacuum and in ther-
mal states, where they turn out to be temperature independent. On the
field theory side we develop and proof a formula using kinematic space
which computes subregion complexities without referencing the bulk.
We apply our formula to global AdS 3 , the conical defect and a black
hole. While entanglement, i.e. minimal boundary anchored geodesics,
suffices to produce vacuum geometries, for the conical defect we also
need geodesics windings non-trivially around the singularity. The black
hole geometry requires additional thermal contributions.
Die Emission solarer Typ II Radiobursts ist ein seit Jahrzehnten beobachtetes Phänomen der heliosphärischen Plasmaphysik. Diese Radiobursts, die im Zusammenhang mit der Propagation koronaler Schockfronten auftreten, zeigen ein charakteristisches, zweibandiges Emissionsspektrum. Mit expandierendem Schock driften sie zu niedrigeren Frequenzen. Analytische Theorien dieser Emission sagen nichtlineare Plasmawellenwechselwirkung als Ursache voraus, doch aufgrund des geringen Sonnenabstands der Emissionsregion ist die in-situ Datenlage durch Satellitenmessungen äusserst schlecht, so dass eine endgültige Verifikation der vorhergesagten Vorgänge bisher nicht möglich war. Mit Hilfe eines kinetischen Plasma-Simulationscodes nach dem Particle-in-Cell Prinzip wurde in dieser Dissertation die Plasmaumgebung in der Foreshock-Region einer koronalen Schockfront modelliert. Das Propagations- und Kopplungsverhalten elektrostatischer und elektromagnetischer Wellenmoden wurde untersucht. Die vollständige räumliche Information über die Wellenzusammensetzung in der Simulation erlaubt es, die Kinematik nichtlinearer Wellenkopplungen genauestens zu untersuchen. Es zeigte sich ein mit der analytischen Theorie der Drei-Wellen-Wechselwirkung konsistentes Bild der Erzeugung solarer Radiobursts: durch elektromagnetischen Zerfall elektrostatischer Moden kommt es zur Erzeugung fundamentaler, sowie durch Verschmelzung gegenpropagierender elektrostatischer Moden zur Anregung harmonischer Radioemission. Kopplungsstärken und Winkelabhängigkeit dieser Prozesse wurden untersucht. Mit dem somit zur Verfügung stehenden, numerischen Laborsystem wurde die Parameter-Abhängigkeit der Wellenkopplungen und entstehenden Radioemissionen bezüglich Stärke des Elektronenbeams und des solaren Abstandes untersucht.
In this PhD thesis, we develop models for the numerical simulation of epitaxial crystal growth, as realized, e.g., in molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The basic idea is to use a discrete lattice gas representation of the crystal structure, and to apply kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulations for the description of the growth dynamics. The main advantage of the KMC approach is the possibility to account for atomistic details and at the same time cover MBE relevant time scales in the simulation. In chapter 1, we describe the principles of MBE, pointing out relevant physical processes and the influence of experimental control parameters. We discuss various methods used in the theoretical description of epitaxial growth. Subsequently, the underlying concepts of the KMC method and the lattice gas approach are presented. Important aspects concerning the design of a lattice gas model are considered, e.g. the solid-on-solid approximation or the choice of an appropriate lattice topology. A key element of any KMC simulation is the selection of allowed events and the evaluation of Arrhenius rates for thermally activated processes. We discuss simplifying schemes that are used to approximate the corresponding energy barriers if detailed knowledge about the barriers is not available. Finally, the efficient implementation of the MC kinetics using a rejection-free algorithm is described. In chapter 2, we present a solid-on-solid lattice gas model which aims at the description of II-VI(001) semiconductor surfaces like CdTe(001). The model accounts for the zincblende structure and the relevant surface reconstructions of Cd- and Te-terminated surfaces. Particles at the surface interact via anisotropic nearest and next nearest neighbor interactions, whereas interactions in the bulk are isotropic. The anisotropic surface interactions reflect known properties of CdTe(001) like the small energy difference between the c(2x2) and (2x1) vacancy structures of Cd-terminated surfaces. A key element of the model is the presence of additional Te atoms in a weakly bound Te* state, which is motivated by experimental observations of Te coverages exceeding one monolayer at low temperatures and high Te fluxes. The true mechanism of binding excess Te to the surface is still unclear. Here, we use a mean-field approach assuming a Te* reservoir with limited occupation. In chapter 3, we perform KMC simulations of atomic layer epitaxy (ALE) of CdTe(001). We study the self-regulation of the ALE growth rate and demonstrate how the interplay of the Te* reservoir occupation with the surface kinetics results in two different regimes: at high temperatures the growth rate is limited to one half layer of CdTe per ALE cycle, whereas at low enough temperatures each cycle adds a complete layer. The temperature where the transition between the two regimes occurs depends mainly on the particle fluxes. The temperature dependence of the growth rate and the flux dependence of the transition temperature are in good qualitative agreement with experimental results. Comparing the macroscopic activation energy for Te* desorption in our model with experimental values we find semiquantitative agreement. In chapter 4, we study the formation of nanostructures with alternating stripes during submonolayer heteroepitaxy of two different adsorbate species on a given substrate. We evaluate the influence of two mechanisms: kinetic segregation due to chemically induced diffusion barriers, and strain relaxation by alternating arrangement of the adsorbate species. KMC simulations of a simple cubic lattice gas with weak inter-species binding energy show that kinetic effects are sufficient to account for stripe formation during growth. The dependence of the stripe width on control parameters is investigated. We find an Arrhenius temperature dependence, in agreement with experimental investigations of phase separation in binary or ternary material systems. Canonical MC simulations show that the observed stripes are not stable under equilibrium conditions: the adsorbate species separate into very large domains. Off-lattice simulations which account for the lattice misfit of the involved particle species show that, under equilibrium conditions, the competition between binding and strain energy results in regular stripe patterns with a well-defined width depending on both misfit and binding energies. In KMC simulations, the stripe-formation and the experimentally reported ramification of adsorbate islands are reproduced. To clarify the origin of the island ramification, we investigate an enhanced lattice gas model whose parameters are fitted to match characteristic off-lattice diffusion barriers. The simulation results show that a satisfactory explanation of experimental observations within the lattice gas framework requires a detailed incorporation of long-range elastic interactions. In the appendix we discuss supplementary topics related to the lattice gas simulations in chapter 4.
During the last decades the standard model of particle physics has evolved to one of the most precise theories in physics, describing the properties and interactions of fundamental particles in various experiments with a high accuracy. However it lacks on some shortcomings from experimental as well as from theoretical point of view: There is no approved mechanism for the generation of masses of the fundamental particles, in particular also not for the light, but massive neutrinos. In addition the standard model does not provide an explanation for the observance of dark matter in the universe. Moreover the gauge couplings of the three forces in the standard model do not unify, implying that a fundamental theory combining all forces can not be formulated. Within this thesis we address supersymmetric models as answers to these various questions, but instead of focusing on the most simple supersymmetrization of the standard model, we consider basic extensions, namely the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model (NMSSM), which contains an additional singlet field, and R-parity violating models. R-parity is a discrete symmetry introduced to guarantee the stability of the proton. Using lepton number violating terms in the context of bilinear R-parity violation and the munuSSM we are able to explain neutrino physics intrinsically supersymmetric, since those terms induce a mixing between the neutralinos and the neutrinos. Since 2009 the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN explores the new energy regime of Tera-electronvolt, allowing the production of potentially existing heavy particles by the collision of protons. Thus the near future might provide answers to the open questions of mass generation in the standard model and show hints towards physics beyond the standard model. Therefore this thesis works out the phenomenology of the supersymmetric models under consideration and tries to point out differences to the well-known features of the simplest supersymmetric realization of the standard model. In case of the R-parity violating models the decays of the light neutralinos can result in displaced vertices. In combination with a light singlet state these displaced vertices might offer a rich phenomenology like non-standard Higgs decays into a pair of singlinos decaying with displaced vertices. Within this thesis we present some calculations at next order of perturbation theory, since one-loop corrections provide possibly large contributions to the tree-level masses and decay widths. We are using an on-shell renormalization scheme to calculate the masses of neutralinos and charginos including the neutrinos and leptons in case of the R-parity violating models at one-loop level. The discussion shows the similarities and differences to existing calculations in another renormalization scheme, namely the DRbar scheme. Moreover we consider two-body decays of the form chi_j^0 -> chi_l^\pm W^\mp involving a heavy gauge boson in the final state at one-loop level. Corrections are found to be large in case of small or vanishing tree-level decay widths and also for the R-parity violating decay of the lightest neutralino chi_1^0 -> l^\pm W^\mp. An interesting feature of the models based on bilinear R-parity violation is the correlation between the branching ratios of the lightest neutralino decays and the neutrino mixing angles. We discuss these relations at tree-level and for two-body decays chi_1^0 -> l^\pm W^\mp also at one-loop level, since only the full one-loop corrections result in the tree-level expected behavior. The appendix describes the two programs MaCoR and CNNDecays being developed for the analysis carried out in this thesis. MaCoR allows for the calculation of mass matrices and couplings in the models under consideration and CNNDecays is used for the one-loop calculations of neutralino and chargino mass matrices and the two-body decay widths.
The Three-Site Higgsless Model is alternative implementation of electroweak symmetry breaking which in the Standard Model is mediated by the Higgs mechanism. The main features of this model is the appearance of two new heavy vector resonances W' and Z' with masses > 380 GeV as well as a set of new heavy fermions (> 1.8 TeV). In this model, unitarity of the amplitudes for the scattering of longitudinal gauge bosons is maintained by the exchange of the W' and Z' up to a scale of ~2 TeV. Consistency with the electroweak precision observables from the LEP / LEP-II experiments implies an exceedingly small coupling of the new vector bosons to the light Standard Model fermions (about 3% of the isospin gauge coupling). In this thesis, the LHC phenomenology of this scenario is explored. To this end, we calculated the couplings and widths of all the new particles and implemented the model into the Monte-Carlo eventgenerator WHIZARD / O'Mega. With this implementation, we simulated the parton-level production of the gauge boson and fermion partners in different channels possibly suitable for their discovery at the LHC. The results are presented together with an introduction to the model and a discussion of its properties. We find that, while the fermiophobic nature of the new heavy gauge bosons does make them intrinsically difficult to observe at a collider, the LHC should be able to establish the existence of both resonances and even give some hints about the properties of their couplings which would be a vital test of the consistency of such a scenario. For the heavy fermions, we find that their large mass is accompanied by relative widths of more than $10\%$, making them ill-suited for a direct discovery at the LHC. Nevertheless, our simulations reveal that there is a part of parameter space where, given enough time, patience and a good understanding of detector and backgrounds, a direct discovery might be possible.
This Thesis investigates the interplay of a central degree of freedom with an environment. Thereby, the environment is prepared in a localized phase of matter.
The long-term aim of this setup is to store quantum information on the central degree of freedom while exploiting the advantages of localized systems.
These many-body localized systems fail to equilibrate under the description of thermodynamics, mostly due to disorder. Doing so, they form the most prominent phase of matter that violates the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis. Thus, many-body localized systems preserve information about an initial state until infinite times without the necessity to isolate the system.
This unique feature clearly suggests to store quantum information within localized environments, whenever isolation is impracticable.
After an introduction to the relevant concepts, this Thesis examines to which extent a localized phase of matter may exist at all if a central degree of freedom dismantles the notion of locality in the first place. To this end, a central spin is coupled to the disordered Heisenberg spin chain, which shows many-body localization. Furthermore, a noninteracting analog describing free fermions is discussed. Therein, an impurity is coupled to an Anderson localized environment.
It is found that in both cases, the presence of the central degree of freedom manifests in many properties of the localized environment. However, for a sufficiently weak coupling, quantum chaos, and thus, thermalization is absent. In fact, it is shown that the critical disorder, at which the metal-insulator transition of its environment occurs in the absence of the central degree of freedom, is modified by the coupling strength of the central degree of freedom. To demonstrate this, a phase diagram is derived.
Within the localized phase, logarithmic growth of entanglement entropy, a typical signature of many-body localized systems, is increased by the coupling to the central spin. This property is traced back to resonantly coupling spins within the localized Heisenberg chain and analytically derived in the absence of interactions. Thus, the studied model of free fermions is the first model without interactions that mimics the logarithmic spreading of entanglement entropy known from many-body localized systems.
Eventually, it is demonstrated that observables regarding the central spin significantly break the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis within the localized phase. Therefore, it is demonstrated how a central spin can be employed as a detector of many-body localization.
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are among the brightest sources in our universe. These galaxies are considered active because their central region is brighter than the luminosities of all stars in a galxies can provide. In their center is a supermassive black hole (SMBH) surrounded by an accretion disk and further out a dusty torus. AGN can be found with emission over the whole electromagnetic spectrum, starting at radio frequencies over optical and X-ray emission up to the $\gamma$-rays. Not all of these sources are detected in each frequency regime. In this work mainly blazars are examined at low radio frequencies. Blazars are a subclass of radio-loud AGN. These radio-loud sources usually exhibit highly collimated jets perpendicular to the accretion disk. For blazars these jets are pointed in the direction of the observer and their emission is highly variable. \\
AGN are classified in different subclasses based on their morphology. These different subclasses are combined in the AGN unification model, which explains the different morphologies by having sources only varying in their luminosities and their angle to the line of sight to the observer. Blazars are these targets, where the jet is pointing towards the observer, while the AGN observed edge on are called radio galaxies. This means that blazars should be the counterparts to radio galaxies seen from a different angle. Testing this is one of the goals in this work. \\
After the discovery of AGN in the 1940s these objects have been studied at all wavelengths. With the development of interferometry with radio telescopes the angular resolution for radio observations could be improved. In the last 20 years many AGN are regularly monitored. One of these monitoring programs is the MOJAVE program, monitoring 274 AGNs with using the Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) technique. The monitoring provides information on the evolution and structure of AGN and their jets. However, the mechanisms of the jet formation and their collimation are not fully understood. Due to relativistic effects it is difficult to obtain intrinsic instead of apparent parameters of these jets. One approach to get closer to the intrinsic jet power is by observing the regions, in which the jets end and interact with the intergalactic medium. Observations at lower radio frequencies are more sensitive for extended diffuse emission. \\
Since December 2012 a new radio telescope for low frequencies is observing. It is a telescope with stations consisting of dipole antennas. The major part of the array located in the Netherlands (38 stations) with 12 additional international stations in Germany, France, Sweden, Poland and the United Kingdom. This instrument is called the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR). LOFAR offers the possibility to observe at frequencies between 30--250 MHz in combination with angular resolution (below 1 arcsec for the full array), which was not available with previous telescopes. \\
In this work results of blazar studies with LOFAR observations are presented. To take advantage of a large database with multi-wavelength observations and kinematic studies the MOJAVE 1.5 Jy flux limited sample was chosen. Based on the preliminary results of the LOFAR Multifrequency Snapshot Sky Survey (MSSS) the flux densities and spectral indices of blazars of the MOJAVE sample are examined. 125 counterparts of MOJAVE blazars were found in the MSSS catalog. Since the MSSS observations only contain the stations in the Netherlands and observes in snapshots, the angular resolution and the sensitivity is limited. The first MSSS catalog was produced with an angular resolution of $\sim$120 arcsec and a sensitivity of $\sim$50--100 mJy. Another advantage of the MOJAVE sample is the monitoring of these sources with the Owens Valley Radio Observatory (OVRO) at 15 GHz to produce radio lightcurves. With these observations it is possible to get quasi-simultaneous flux densities at 15 GHz for the corresponding MSSS observations. By having quasi-simultaneous observations the variability of the blazars affects the flux densities less than with the use of archival data. The spectral indices obtained by the combination of MSSS and OVRO flux densities can be used to estimate the contribution of the diffuse extended emission for these AGNs. \\
Comparing the MSSS catalog with the OVRO data points, the flux densities have a tendency to be higher at low frequencies. This is expected due to the higher contribution of extended emission. The broadband spectral index distribution shows a peak at $\sim-0.2$. While some sources seem to have steeper spectral indices meaning that extended emission contributes a large fraction of the total flux density, more than the half of the sample shows flat spectral indices. The flat spectral indices show that the total flux densities of these sources are dominated by their relativistic beamed emission regions, which is the same for the observations at GHz frequencies. \\
To obtain more detailed images of these sources the MSSS measurement sets including sources of the sample were reprocessed to improve the angular resolution to $\sim$30 arcsec. The higher angular resolution reveals extended diffuse emission of several blazars. Since the reimaging results were not fully calibrated only the morphology at this resolution could be examined. However, with the short snapshot observations the images obtained with this strategy are affected from artifacts. The reimaging could be successfully performed for 93 sources in one frequency band. For 45 of these sources all availabe frequency bands could be reprocessed and used to created averaged images. These images are presented in this work. As a results of the reimaging process a pilot sample was defined to observe targets with diffuse extended emission using the whole LOFAR array including the international stations. \\
The second part of this work presents the results of a pilot sample consisting of four blazars observed with the LOFAR international array. Since the calibration of this kind of LOFAR observation is still in development, the main focus was the description of the used calibration strategy. The calibration strategies still has some limitation but resulted in images with angular resolutions of less than 1 arcsec. The morphology of all four blazars show features confirming the expectations of their counterpart radio galaxies. With the flux densities of the extended emission found in these brightness distributions the extended radio luminosities are calculated. Comparing these to the radio galaxy classifications also confirm the expectations from the unification model. \\
By extending the sample of observed blazars with LOFAR international in future the calibration strategy can be used to create similar high resolution images. A larger sample can be used to test the unification model with statistical significant results. \\
Classical novae are thermonuclear explosions occurring on the surface of white dwarfs.
When co-existing in a binary system with a main sequence or more evolved star, mass
accretion from the companion star to the white dwarf can take place if the companion
overflows its Roche lobe. The envelope of hydrogen-rich matter which builds on
top of the white dwarf eventually ignites under degenerate conditions, leading to
a thermonuclear runaway and an explosion in the order of 1046 erg, while leaving
the white dwarf intact. Spectral analyses from the debris indicate an abundance of
isotopes that are tracers of nuclear burning via the hot CNO cycle, which in turn
reveal some sort of mixing between the envelope and the white dwarf underneath.
The exact mechanism is still a matter of debate.
The convection and deflagration in novae develop in the low Mach number regime.
We used the Seven League Hydro code (SLH ), which employs numerical schemes
designed to correctly simulate low Mach number flows, to perform two and three-
dimensional simulations of classical novae. Based on a spherically-symmetric model
created with aid of a stellar evolution code, we developed our own nova model and
tested it on a variety of numerical grids and boundary conditions for validation. We
focused on the evolution of temperature, density and nuclear energy generation rate at
the layers between white dwarf and envelope, where most of the energy is generated,
to understand the structure of the transition region, and its effect on the nuclear
burning. We analyzed the resulting dredge-up efficiency stemming from the convective
motions in the envelope. Our models yield similar results to the literature, but seem
to depend very strongly on the numerical resolution. We followed the evolution of
the nuclear species involved in the CNO cycle and concluded that the thermonuclear
reactions primarily taking place are those of the cold and not the hot CNO cycle.
The reason behind this could be that under the conditions generally assumed for
multi-dimensional simulations, the envelope is in fact not degenerate. We performed
initial tests for 3D simulations and realized that alternative boundary conditions are
needed.
In the context of the indirect search for non-standard physics in the flavour sector of the Standard Model (SM), one of the most interesting processes is the rare inclusive B -> X_s gamma decay. On the one hand, being a flavour-changing neutral current, this B decay is sensitive to new physics, as it is loop-suppressed in the SM. On the other hand, it is only mildly affected by non-perturbative effects, and thus allows for precise theoretical predictions in the framework of renormalization-group improved perturbation theory. Accurate measurements as well as precise theoretical predictions with a good control over both perturbative and non-perturbative contributions have to be provided in order to derive stringent constraints on the parameter space of physics beyond the SM. On the experimental side, an outstanding accuracy in the measurement of the B -> Xs gamma decay rate has been achieved, which is mainly due the specialized experiments BaBar and Belle at the so-called B factories. To match the small experimental uncertainty, higher order computations within an effective low-energy theory of the SM are mandatory. In fact, next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) QCD corrections are required to provide a prediction for the decay rate with the same precision as the measurement. The NNLO evaluation of the B -> Xs gamma decay rate has been pursued by various groups over the last decade. The project was completed to a large extent and a first estimate at this level of perturbation theory was obtained in 2006. This prediction, however, lacks important contributions from yet unknown matrix elements, that were estimated from results which are only partially known to date. In this work, we provide a framework for the systematic study of the missing matrix elements at the NNLO. As main results of this thesis, we determine fermionic corrections to the charm quark mass dependent matrix elements of four-quark operators in the effective theory at NNLO. For the first time, the full mass dependence was kept. Moreover, we evaluate both bosonic and fermionic corrections to the decay rate in the limit of vanishing charm quark mass. These findings, combined with yet unknown remaining real contributions, will help to reduce the uncertainty of the NNLO branching ratio estimate considerably. Another central topic of the present work is the development of an automatic high-precision computation of multi-loop multi-scale integrals, a crucial ingredient for the here presented results.
Diese Arbeit wurde durch Experimente zur Potential- und Stromverteilung in Quanten-Hall- Systemen motiviert, die in den letzten Jahren in der Abteilung von Klitzing am MPI für Festkörperforschung durchgeführt wurden und ergaben, dass elektrostatische Abschirmungseffekte in zweidimensionalen Elektronensystemen (2DES), die den ganzzahligen Quanten-Hall-Effekt (QHE) zeigen, sehr wichtig für das Verständnis der Stromverteilung innerhalb der Probe und der extremen Genauigkeit der gemessenen quantisierten Werte des Hall-Widerstands sind. Daraus ergab sich für die hier vorgelegte Arbeit das folgende Programm. Zunächst wird, nach einem einleitenden Kapitel, in Kapitel 2 der Formalismus vorgestellt, mit dem in den späteren Kapiteln Elektronendichten und elektrostatische Potentiale, die z.B. das 2DES auf eine Probe mit Streifengeometrie eingrenzen, selbstkonsistent berechnet werden. Diese Selbstkonsistenz besteht aus zwei Teilen. Erstens wird, bei vorgegebenem Potential, die Elektronendichte berechnet. Zweitens wird aus vorgegebener Ladungsverteilung, bestehend aus (positiven) Hintergrundladungen und der (im ersten Schritt berechneten) Elektronenladungsdichte, und geeigneten Randbedingungen (konstantes Potential auf metallischen Gates) durch Lösen der Poisson-Gleichung das elektrostatische Potential berechnet. Wenn wir im ersten Schritt, unter Berücksichtigung der Fermi-Dirac-Statistik, die Elektronendichte quantenmechanisch aus den Energieeigenfunktionen und -werten berechnen, erhalten wir die Hartree-Näherung, die die Dichte als nichtlokales Funktional des Potentials liefert. Wenn man die Ausdehnung der Wellenfunktionen auf der Längenskala, auf der sich das Potential typischerweise ändert, vernachlässigen kann, so vereinfacht sich die Hartree-Näherung zur Thomas- Fermi-Näherung, die einen lokalen Zusammenhang zwischen Elektronendichte und Potential beschreibt. Die meisten der konkreten Rechnungen wurden im Rahmen dieser selbstkonsistenten Thomas-Fermi-Poisson-Näherung durchgeführt. Im Kapitel 3 wird allgemein das Abschirmverhalten eines 2DES im hohen Magnetfeld untersucht. Wir betrachten die Antwort auf eine harmonische Potentialmodulation im unbegrenzten 2DES und in streifenförmig begrenzten Systemen mit zwei unterschiedlichen Arten von Randbedingungen. Bei tiefen Temperaturen und hohen Magnetfeldern finden wir extrem nichtlineare Abschirmung. Im unbegrenzten 2DES charakterisieren wir die Abschirmung, indem wir die gesamte Variation des selbstkonsistent berechneten Potentials als Funktion der Amplitude des aufgeprägten cosinus-Potentials berechnen. Bei festem Magnetfeld ergeben sich so Stufenfunktionen, deren Gestalt stark vom Füllfaktor der Landau-Niveaus im homogenen Zustand ohne aufgeprägtes Potential abhängt (siehe Abbildungen 3.2- 3.6). Vielleicht noch unerwartetere Kurven ergeben sich, wenn man bei festem Modulationspotential die Varianz des selbstkonsistenten Potentials gegen das Magnetfeld B aufträgt (Abb. 3.9). Die Resultate lassen sich aber leicht verstehen und (bei Temperatur T = 0) in einem einfachen Schema (Abb. 3.7) zusammenfassen. Als ordnendes Prinzip stellt sich heraus, dass sich stets Zustände einstellen, in denen die Elektronendichte möglichst wenig von der bei verschwindendem Magnetfeld abweicht. Wenn die Zyklotronenergie groß gegen die thermische Energie kBT ist, erfordert das, dass in den großen Bereichen, in denen die Dichte variiert, ein Landau-Niveau unmittelbar an dem, im Gleichgewicht konstanten, elektrochemischen Potential liegen muss (En, “pinning”). Man nennt diese Bereiche kompressibel. In den kompressiblen Bereichen können Elektronen leicht umverteilt werden, d.h. die Dichte ist leicht veränderbar und in diesen Bereichen gibt es extrem effektive Abschirmung. Existieren kompressible Bereiche mit unterschiedlichen Landau-Niveaus (En) am elektrochemischen Potential, z.B. bei großer Modulation oder weil die Dichte zum Probenrand hin abnimmt, so gibt es zwischen benachbarten kompressiblen Bereichen mit unterschiedlichen Landau-Quantenzahlen n “inkompressible” Bereiche, in denen zwischen zwei Landau-Niveaus liegt. Dort sind alle Landau-Niveaus unterhalb von besetzt, die oberhalb leer. Folglich ist dort der Füllfaktor ganzzahlig und die Dichte konstant. Das Wechselspiel zwischen kompressiblen und inkompressiblen Bereichen bestimmt das Abschirmverhalten. Randeffekte erweisen sich nur in solchen Magnetfeldintervallen als wichtig für die Abschirmung im Inneren einer streifenförmigen Probe, in denen (schon ohne aufgeprägte Modulation) in der Probenmitte ein neuer inkompressibler Streifen entsteht. Im Kapitel 4 wird die Rolle der inkompressiblen Streifen in einer idealisierten, streifenförmigen Hall-Probe untersucht. Mithilfe einer lokalen Version des Ohmschen Gesetzes berechnen wir bei vorgegebenen Gesamtstrom die Stromdichte und das nun ortsabhängige elektrochemische Potential, dessen Gradient die Stromdichte treibt. Für den lokalen Leitfähigkeitstensor nehmen wir ein für homogenes 2DES berechnetes Resultat und ersetzen den Füllfaktor jeweils durch den lokalen Wert. Dadurch ergibt sich, dass bei Existenz inkompressibler Streifen der gesamte Strom auf diese Streifen eingeschränkt ist, in denen die Komponenten des spezifischen Widerstands die Werte des freien, idealen 2DES haben, also verschwindenden longitudinalen und quantisierten Hall-Widerstand. Aus Hartree-Rechnungen zeigen wir, dass es inkompressible Streifen nur in Magnetfeldintervallen endlicher Breite (um ganzzahlige Füllfaktoren) gibt und dass in der Nähe von Füllfaktor 4 es nur inkompressible Streifen mit dem lokalen Füll-faktor \nu(x) = 4 gibt, aber nicht solche mit \nu(x) = 2, in Gegensatz zu dem Ergebnis der Thomas-Fermi-Poisson-Näherung, die hier nicht gültig ist. Um diese Unzulänglichkeit der Thomas-Fermi-Poisson-Näherung und Artefakte des strikt lokalen Modells zu beheben, führen wir die Rechnungen mit einem (auf der Skala des mittleren Elektronenabstands) gemittelten Leitfähigkeitstensors aus. Damit erhalten wir, im Rahmen einer Linear-Response-Rechnung, sehr schöne Übereinstimmung mit den Potentialmessungen, die diese Dissertation motivierten, einen kausalen Zusammenhang zwischen der Existenz inkompressibler Streifen und der Existenz von Plateaus im QHE, und ein Verständnis der extremen Genauigkeit, mit der die quantisierten Widerstandswerte reproduziert werden können, unabhängig von Probenmaterial und -geometrie. Im Kapitel 5 untersuchen wir das Zufallspotential, in dem sich die Elektronen bewegen. Wir gehen davon aus, dass sich hinter einer undotierten Schicht eine Ebene mit zufällig verteilten ionisierten Donatoren befindet, deren Coulomb-Potentiale sich zu dem Zufallspotential überlagern. Wir weisen darauf hin, dass sich die langreichweitigen Fluktuationen dieses Potentials anders verhalten als die kurzreichweitigen. Die kurzreichweitigen klingen mit dem Abstand der Donatorebene von der Ebene des 2DES exponentiell ab, werden aber (bei B = 0) nur schwach durch das 2DES abgeschirmt. Diese Fluktuationen haben wir durch die endlichen Leitfähigkeiten und die Stoßverbreiterung der Landau-Niveaus berücksichtigt. Die langreichweitigen Fluktuationen, andererseits, sind nur schwach von der Entfernung der Donatorebene abhängig, werden aber stark vom 2DES abgeschirmt. Diese sollte man bei der selbstkonsistenten Abschirmungsrechnung explizit berücksichtigen. Erste Versuche in dieser Richtung zeigen, dass sie die Quanten-Hall-Plateaus verbreitern, verschieben und stabilisieren können. Sie sollten besonders bei breiten Proben wichtig werden, bei denen sie zusätzliche inkompressible Streifen im Probeninneren verursachen können. Schließlich diskutieren wir in Kapitel 6 Abschirmungseffekte in einem Doppelschichtsystem aus zwei parallelen 2DES. Interessante neue Effekte treten auf, wenn die Schichten verschiedene Dichten haben. Das Auftreten inkompressibler Streifen in der einen Schicht kann dann drastische Auswirkungen auf die andere Schicht haben. Widerstandsmessungen in Abhängigkeit vom Magnetfeld, die kürzlich an solchen Systemen durchgeführt wurden, zeigen, dass am Rande eines QH-Plateaus Hysterese auftritt, d.h. dass die für ansteigendes Magnetfeld gemessene Kurve nicht mit der für abfallendes Magnetfeld gemessenen Kurve übereinstimmt, wenn dieser Magnetfeldbereich in ein QH-Plateau der anderen Schicht fällt. Wir entwickeln ein Modell und beschreiben Modellrechnungen, die dieses Phänomen plausibel machen.
By the end of the year 2011, both the CMS and ATLAS experiments at the Large Hadron Collider have recorded around 5 inverse femtobarns of data at an energy of 7 TeV. There are only vague hints from the already analysed data towards new physics at the TeV scale. However, one knows that around this scale, new physics should show up so that theoretical issues of the standard model of particle physics can be cured. During the last decades, extensions to the standard model that are supposed to solve its problems have been constructed, and the corresponding phenomenology has been worked out. As soon as new physics is discovered, one has to deal with the problem of determining the nature of the underlying model. A first hint is of course given by the mass spectrum and quantum numbers such as electric and colour charges of the new particles. However, there are two popular model classes, supersymmetric models and extradimensional models, which can exhibit almost equal properties at the accessible energy range. Both introduce partners to the standard model particles with the same charges and thus one needs an extended discrimination method. From the origin of these partners arises a relevant difference: The partners constructed in extradimensional models have the same spin as their standard model partners while in Supersymmetry they differ by spin 1/2.\\ These different spins have an impact on the phenomenology of the two models. For example, one can exploit the fact that the total cross sections are affected, but this requires a very good knowledge of the couplings and masses involved. Another approach uses angular distributions depending on the particle spins. A prevailing method based on this idea uses the invariant mass distribution of the visible particles in decay chains. One can relate these distributions to the spin of the particle mediating the decay since it reflects itself in the highest power of the invariant mass $\sff$ of the adjacent particles. In this thesis we first study the influence of higher than dimension 4 operators on spin determination in such decay chains. We write down the relevant dimension 5 and 6 operators and calculate their contributions to the invariant mass distribution. We discuss how they affect the determination of spin and couplings.\\ We then address two scenarios which do not involve decay chains in the usual sense. In three body decays, the method pointed out above cannot be applied since it can only be used if the mediating particle is produced on-shell. For off-shell decays, which are important e.g. in split-Supersymmetry or split-Universal Extra Dimensions, the narrow width approximation cannot be made which previously led to the simple relation between spin and the highest power of $\sff$. We work out a strategy for these three body decays that can distinguish between the different spin scenarios. The method relies on the fact that the differential decay width $d\Gamma /d\sff$ can be rewritten in this limit as a global phase space function and a polynomial in $\sff$. The coefficients in this polynomial are functions of masses and couplings and we show that they have distinct signs or ratios depending on the spins involved in the decay. We test the strategy in a series of Monte Carlo studies and discuss the influence of the intermediate particle's mass. In the last part we consider a topology with very short decay chains. Again one cannot use the relation between spin and invariant mass. We investigate one variable that has been invented for the discrimination of Supersymmetry and Universal Extra Dimensions in the high energy limit which reduces the problem to the underlying production process. We show how this variable can also be used in new physics scenarios where the high energy limit is not a viable approximation. We include all possible spin scenarios with renormalizable interactions and study in detail the influence of the involved masses and couplings on the discrimination power of this variable. We find for example that the scenario containing the supersymmetric case is well distinguishable from most other spin scenarios.
Bis heute ist nicht bekannt, in welcher Umgebung die schwersten Elemente durch Neutroneneinfangprozesse entstehen. Es gibt zwei mögliche Szenarien, die in der Literatur diskutiert werden: Supernova-Explosionen und Neutronensternverschmelzungen. Beide tragen zur Elementproduktion bei. Welches Szenario aber die dominierende Umgebung ist, bleibt umstritten. Mehrere Fakten sprechen für Supernova-Explosionen als Entstehungsorte: Wenn ein massereicher Stern kollabiert und anschließend explodiert, sind die Temperatur und die Dichte so hoch, dass Neutronen von den bereits bestehenden Elementen eingefangen und angelagert werden können. Obwohl in Simulationen mit kugelsymmetrischen Modellen nur protonen- reiche Auswürfe entstehen, kann es in asymmetrischen Explosionen aufgrund der Rotation und der Magnetfelder vermutlich zu einem neutronenreichen Auswurf kommen. Dieser ist hoch genug, dass der schnelle Neutroneneinfang auftreten kann. In dieser Arbeit habe ich daher die Überreste solcher Explosionen untersucht, um nach Asymmetrien und ihren möglichen Auswirkungen auf die Element-Entstehung und Verteilung zu suchen. Dafür wurden die beiden Supernova-Überreste CTB 109 und RCW 103 ausgewählt. CTB 109 besitzt im Zentrum einen anomale Röntgenpulsar, also einen Neutronenstern mit hohem Magnetfeld und starker Rotation, die durch Asymmetrien hervorgerufen worden sein könnten. Auch RCW 103 hat vermutlich einen solchen Pulsar als zentrale Quelle. Beide Überreste sind noch recht jung und befinden sich in ihrer Sedov-Taylor Phase. Die Distanz zur Erde beträgt für beide Überreste ungefähr 3 kpc, womit sie in der näheren Umgebung der Erde zu finden sind. Die Elemente bis zur Eisengruppe haben ihre bekanntesten Linien im Bereich der Röntgenstrahlung. Deswegen wurden für diese Arbeit archivierte Daten des Satelliten XMM-Newton ausgewählt und die Spektren in definierten Regionen in den bei- den Supernova-Überresten mit den EPIC MOS-Kameras ausgewertet. Die heutigen Röntgensatelliten haben jedoch keine ausreichende Sensitivität, um die schwersten Elemente zu detektieren. In den Spektren der beiden Überreste wurden deshalb vorwiegend die Elemente Silizium und Magnesium gefunden, in CTB 109 auch Neon. Elemente mit höheren Massezahlen konnten leider nicht signifikant aus dem Hintergrund herausgefiltert werden. Deutlich sind die Peaks der drei Elementen sichtbar, aber auch Schwefel ist in den Regionen mit hohen Zählraten zu entdecken. Für bei- de Supernova-Überreste wurde der beste Fit mit dem Modell vpshock gefunden. In diesem Modell wird ein Plasma angenommen, das bei konstanter Temperatur plan-parallel geschockt wird. Um diesen Fit zu erzielen wurden die Parameter für die Elemente Fe, S, Si, Mg, O und Ne variiert. Die restlichen Elemente wurden auf die solare Häufigkeit festgelegt. Bei CTB 109 befinden sich die Temperaturen (kT) in den Regionen mit hohen Zählraten im Bereich zwischen 0.6 und 0.7 keV und liegen damit im selben Bereich, der bereits mit anderen Teleskopen für CTB 109 gefunden wurde. In den Regionen mit niedrigen Zählraten liegen die Temperaturen etwas tiefer mit 0.3-0.4 keV. Im Supernova-Überrest RCW 103 wurde nur eine Region mit hoher Zählrate analysiert und eine Temperatur von 0.57 keV gefunden, während in der Region mit niedriger Zählrate die Temperatur kT = 0.36 ± 0.08 keV beträgt. Beide Werte passen zu den Werten in CTB 109. Die einzelnen Elementlinien wurden zusätzlich mit einer Gauß-Verteilung angepasst und die Flüsse ermittelt. Diese wurden in Intensitätskarten aufgetragen, in denen die unterschiedlichen Verteilungen der Elemente über den Supernova-Überrest zu sehen sind. Während Silizium in einigen wenigen Regionen geklumpt auftritt, ist Magnesium über die Überreste verteilt und hat in einigen Regionen höhere Werte als Silizium. Das lässt den Schluss zu, dass die beiden Elemente auf unterschiedliche Weise aus der Explosion herausgeschleudert wurden. Die Verteilung ist hier durchaus asymmetrisch, es ist jedoch nicht möglich dies auf eine asymmetrische Explosion der Supernova zurückzuführen. Dafür müssen mehr als zwei Supernova-Überreste mit dieser Methode untersucht werden und mit einer noch nicht vorhandenen Theorie zur Verteilung der Elemente in Überresten verglichen werden. Im direkten Vergleich der beiden bisher untersuchten Supernova-Überreste CTB 109 und RCW 103 sieht man, dass die beiden Überreste sich sehr in der Temperatur und der Verteilung der Elemente ähneln. Das lässt auf eine einheitliche Ausbreitung der Elemente innerhalb der Supernova-Überreste schließen. Silizium wird aufgrund der Explosion in fingerartigen Strukturen, die Rayleigh-Taylor-Instabilitäten, nach außen transportiert. Dabei bildet es Klumpen, die mit den weiter außen liegenden Schalen reagieren. Magnesium und Neon hingegen werden hauptsächlich in den Brennphasen vor der Explosion und in den äußeren Schichten des Sterns, der Zwiebelschalenstruktur, produziert. Dadurch ist eine ausgedehnte Verteilung zu er- warten. Diese Verteilungen der drei Elemente ist in dieser Arbeit bestätigt worden. Während Magnesium und Neon über den gesamten Überrest hohe Flüsse aufweisen, ist Silizium sehr lokal im Lobe von CTB 109 und im hellen Süden von RCW 103 zu finden. Mit zukünftigen Röntgenteleskopen, die eine höhere räumliche Auflösung ermöglichen, könnten die beobachteten Zusammenhänge zwischen der asymmetrischen Elementverteilung im Supernovaüberrest und den Mechanismen der Elemententstehung in der Supernova weiter untersucht werden.
Strong correlations caused by interaction in systems of electrons can bring about unusual physical phenomena due to many-body quantum effects that cannot properly be captured by standard electronic structure methods like density functional theory. In this thesis, we apply the state-of-the-art continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo algorithm in hybridization expansion (CT-HYB) for the strongly correlated multi-orbital Anderson impurity model (AIM) to the solution of models of magnetic impurities on metallic surfaces and, via dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT), to the solution of a lattice model, the multi-orbital Hubbard model with Hund's coupling.
A concise introduction to the theoretical background focuses on information directly relevant to the understanding of applied models, methods, and the interpretation of results. It starts with a discussion of the AIM with its parameters and its solution in the path integral formalism, the basis of the CT-HYB algorithm. We consider its derivation and implementation in some detail before reviewing the DMFT approach to correlated lattice models and the interpretation of the single-particle Green's function.
We review two algorithmic developments for the CT-HYB algorithm that help to increase the performance of calculations especially in case of a complex structure of the interaction matrix and allow the precise calculation of self-energies and vertex functions also at intermediate and higher frequencies.
Our comparative analysis of Kondo screening in the cobalt on copper impurity system points out the importance of an accurate interaction matrix for qualitatively correct Kondo temperatures and the relevance of all d-orbitals in that case. Theoretical modeling of cobalt impurities in copper "atomic wires" fails to reproduce variations and partial absence of Kondo resonances depending on the wire size. We analyze the dependence of results on parameters and consider possible reasons for the discrepancy. Different Kondo temperatures of iron adatoms adsorbed on clean or oxygen-reconstructed niobium in the normal state are qualitatively reproduced, with the adsorption distance identified as major factor and implications for the superconducting state pointed out.
Moving on to lattice problems, we demonstrate the connection between Hund's coupling, shown to cause first-order character of the interaction-driven Mott transition at half-filling in the two-orbital Hubbard model, and a phase separation zone ending in a quantum critical point at finite doping. We touch on similarities in realistic models of iron-pnictide superconductors. We analyze the manifestation of the compressibility divergence at the finite-temperature critical points away from half-filling in the eigenbasis of the two-particle generalized susceptibility. A threshold for impurity susceptibility eigenvalues that indicates divergence of the DMFT lattice compressibility and distinguishes thermodynamic stability and instability of DMFT solutions is determined.
Multi-Wavelength Observations of the high-peaked BL Lacertae objects 1ES 1011+496 and 1ES 2344+514
(2012)
BL Lacertae objects belong to the most luminous sources in the Universe. They represent a subclass of active galactic nuclei with a spectrum that is dominated by non-thermal emission, extending from radio wavelengths to tera electronvolt (TeV) energies. The emission is strongly variable on time scales of years down to minutes, and arises from relativistic jets pointing at small angles to the line of sight of the observer, which is the reason for naming them “blazars”. Blazars are the dominant extragalactic source class in the radio, microwave and gamma-ray regime, are prime candidates for the origin of the Cosmic Rays and excellent laboratories to study black hole and jet physics as well as relativistic effects. Despite more than 20 years of observational efforts, the physical mechanisms driving their emission are not yet fully understood. So far, studies of their broad-band continuum emission were mostly concentrated on bright, flaring states. However, for a better understanding of the central engine powering the jets, the bias from flux-limited observations of the past must be overcome and their long-term average continuum spectral energy distributions (SEDs) must be determined. This work presents the first simultaneous multi-wavelength campaigns from the radio to the TeV regime of two high-frequency peaked BL Lacertae objects known to emit at TeV energies. The first source, 1ES 1011+496, was observed between February and May 2008, the second one, 1ES 2344+514, between September 2008 and February 2009. The extensive observational campaigns were organised independently from an external trigger for the presence of a flaring state. Since the duty cycle of major flux outbursts is known to be rather low, the campaigns were expected to yield SEDs representative of the long-term average emission. Central for this thesis is the analysis of data obtained with the MAGIC Cherenkov telescope, measuring energy spectra and light curves from ~0.1 to ~10 TeV. For the remaining instruments, observation time was proposed and additional data was organised by collaboration with the instrument teams by the author of this work. Such data was obtained mostly in a fully reduced state. Individual light curves are investigated as well as combined in a search for inter-band correlations. The data of both sources reveal a notable lack of a correlation between the emission at radio and optical wavelengths, indicating that the radio and short-wavelength emission arise in different regions of the jet. Quasi-simultaneous SEDs of two different flux states are observationally determined and described by a one-zone as well as a self-consistent two-zone synchrotron self-Compton model. First approaches to model the SEDs by means of a Chi2 minimisation technique are briefly discussed. The SEDs and the resulting model parameters, characterising the physical conditions in the emission regions, are compared to archival data. Though the models can describe the data well, for 1ES 1011+496 the model parameters indicate that in addition to the synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission of relativistic electrons, emission due to accelerated protons seems to be required. The SEDs of 1ES 2344+514 reveal one of the lowest activity states ever detected from the source. Despite that, the model parameters are not indicative of a distinct quiescent state, which may be caused by the degeneracy of the different parameters in one-zone models. Moreover, indications accumulate that the radiation can not be attributed to a single emission region. The results disfavour some of the current blazar classification schemes and the so-called “blazar sequence”, emphasising the need for a more realistic explanation of the systematics of the blazar SEDs in terms of fundamental parameters.
Context. In active galaxies, matter is accreted onto super massive black holes (SMBH). This accretion process causes a region roughly the size of our solar system to outshine the entire host galaxy, forming an active galactic nucleus (AGN). In some of these active galaxies, highly relativistic particle jets are formed parallel to the rotation axis of the super massive black hole. A fraction of these sources is observed under a small inclination angle between the pointing direction of the jet and the observing line of sight. These sources are called blazars. Due to the small inclination angle and the highly relativistic speeds of the particles in the jet, beaming effects occur in the radiation of these particles. Blazars can be subdivided into the high luminosity flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) and the low luminosity BL Lacertae objects (BL Lacs). As all AGN, blazars are broadband emitters and therefore observable from the longest wavelengths in the radio regime to the shortest wavelengths in the gamma-ray regime. In this thesis I will analyze blazars at these two extremes with respect to their parsec-scale properties in the radio and their time evolution properties in gamma-ray flux.
Method. In the radio regime the technique of very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) can be used in order to spatially resolve the synchrotron radiation coming from those objects down to sub-parsec scales. This information can be used to observe the time evolution of the structure of such sources. This is done in large monitoring programs such as the MOJAVE (15 GHz) and the Boston University blazar monitoring program (43 GHz). In this thesis I utilize data of 28 sources from these monitoring programs spanning 10 years of observation from 2003 to 2013, resulting in over 1800 observed epochs, to study the brightness temperature and diameter gradients of these jets. I conduct a search for systematic geometry transitions in the radio jets. The synchrotron cooling time in the radio core of the jets is used to determine the magnetic field strength in the radio core. Considering the jet geometry, these magnetic field strengths are scaled to the ergosphere of the SMBH in order to obtain the distance of the radio core to the SMBH.
In the gamma-regime these blazars cannot be spatially resolved. Due to this, it is hard to put strong constrains onto where the gamma-ray emitting region is. Blazars have shown to be variable at high energies on time scales down to minutes. The nature of this variability can be studied in order to put constrains on the particle acceleration mechanism and possibly the region and size of the gamma-ray emitting region. The variability of blazars in the energy range between 0.1 GeV and 1 GeV can for example be observed with the pair-conversion telescope on board the Fermi satellite. I use 10 years of data from the Fermi-LAT (LAT: Large Area Telescope) satellite in order to study the variability of a large sample of blazars (300-800, depending on the used significance filters for data points). I quantify this variability with the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck (OU) parameters and the power spectral density (PSD) slopes. The same procedure is applied to 20 light curves available for the radio sample.
Results. The diameter evolution along the jet axis of the radio sources suggests, that FSRQs feature flatter gradients than BL Lacs. Fitting these gradients, it is revealed that BL Lacs are systematically better described by a simple single power law than FSRQs. I found 9 sources with a strongly constrained geometry transition. The sources are 0219+421, 0336-019, 0415+379, 0528+134, 0836+710, 1101+384, 1156+295, 1253-055 and 2200+420. In all of these sources, the geometry transition regions are further out in the jet than the Bondi sphere. The magnetic field strengths of BL Lacs is systematically larger than that of FSRQs. However the scaling of these fields suggest that the radio cores of BL Lac objects are closer to the SMBHs than the radio cores of FSRQs. Analyzing the variability of Fermi-LAT light curves yields consistent results for all samples. FSRQs show systematically steeper PSD slopes and feature OU parameters more favorable to strong variability than BL Lacs. The Fermi-LAT light curves of the sub-sample of radio jets, suggest an anticorrelation between the jet complexity from the radio observations and the OU-parameters as well as the PSD slopes from the gamma-ray observations.
Conclusion.
The flatter diameter gradients of FSRQs suggest that these sources are more collimated further down the jet than BL Lacs. The systematically better description of the diameter and brightness temperature gradient by a single power law of BL Lacs, suggest that FSRQs are more complex with respect to the diameter evolution along the jet and the surface brightness distribution than BL Lac objects. FSRQs often feature regions where recollimation can occur in distinct knots within the jets. For the sources where a geometry transition could be constrained, the Bondi radius, being systematically smaller than the position of the transition region along the jet axis, suggest that changing pressure gradients are not the sole cause for these systematic geometry transitions. Nevertheless they may be responsible for recollimation regions, found typically downstream the jet, beyond the Bondi radius and the transition zone. The difference in the distance of the radio cores between FSRQs and BL Lacs is most likely due to the combination of differences in SMBH masses and systematically smaller jet powers in BL Lacs. The variability in energy ranges above 100 MeV and above 1 GeV-regime suggest that many light curves of BL Lac objects are more likely to be white noise while the PSD slopes and the OU parameters of FSRQ gamma-ray light curves favor stronger variability on larger time scales with respect to the time binning of the analyzed light curve. Although the anticorrelation of the jet complexity acquired from the radio observations and the PSD slopes and OU parameters from the gamma-observations suggest that more complex sources favor OU parameters and PSD slopes resulting in more variability (not white noise) it is beyond the scope of this thesis to pinpoint whether this correlation results from causation. The question whether a complex jet causes more gamma-ray variability or more gamma-ray variability causes more complex jets cannot be answered at this point. Nevertheless the computed correlation measures suggest that this dependence is most likely not linear and therefore an indication that these effects might even interact.
Although the contribution to the Isotropic Gamma-Ray Background (IGRB) from unresolved extragalactic objects has been studied for many years, its exact composition and origin are as of yet unknown. It is suspected that diffuse processes such as dark matter annihilation contribute to the total IGRB, as well as unresolved gamma-ray emission from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), including radio galaxies. Radio galaxies are a source class that emit strongly at radio wavelengths, some of which have also been detected at gamma-ray wavelengths by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (Fermi-LAT), and by very high energy gamma-ray Cherenkov telescopes. It is thought that due to the orientation of their jets, radio galaxies are detected less numerously at gamma-ray energies than blazars. Furthermore, only a small number of radio galaxies have been detected at gamma-ray energies though it is considered that others do as well. It is for these reasons that gamma-ray emitting radio galaxies, an interesting and elusive class of objects, are selected for investigation in this work.
In order to reach the goal of better understanding diffuse processes, it is necessary to model the radio galaxy spectral energy distributions (SEDs). As AGN emission is variable with respect to time, it is critical to use simultaneously collected observations. Calculation of the SED based on simultaneous, multiwavelength data across the electromagnetic spectrum produces a reasonably accurate representation of the state of an object in a given time range. The gamma-ray emitting radio galaxies M 87, NGC 1275, Pictor A, and Centaurus A are selected here based on having been detected in very high energy gamma-rays by Cherenkov telescopes, as well as in other wavelengths. A uniquely consistent analysis approach is applied, in which each radio galaxy is analyzed the same way using simultaneously collected data. This approach sets it apart from other studies.
Fermi-LAT raw data for each source in the sample is analyzed in time ranges which directly overlap the very high energy gamma-ray Cherenkov observations, as well as several other wavelength ranges. A synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) model is applied, which provides accurate treatment of synchrotron and inverse-Compton processes occurring in the jets of AGN, while estimating physical characteristics of the source. It is found that the spectra of M 87, NGC 1275, Pictor A, and Centaurus A can be well described by the same SSC model, producing values for the physical characteristics such as the doppler factor and magnetic field, which are relatively consistent with each other.
In order to characterize the diffuse emission from dark matter self-annihilation, the radio galaxy SEDs are also fit with a dark matter model, resulting in an estimated dark matter particle mass of around 4.7 TeV which lies within predicted ranges.
The highly dense regions near the black holes of AGN provide the optimal conditions for detecting these signatures. It is also found here that discrepancies between the expected emission and the observed emission in the spectra of some radio galaxies can be explained using the combined SSC and dark matter model. As emission from dark matter annihilation is expected to remain steady with respect to time, a key feature of this work is the novelty of the combined SSC and dark matter model, and the finding that dark matter characteristics may be revealed through similar multiwavelength analyses during future low emission states of the AGN.
The radio galaxy sample is then extended to include all gamma-ray emitting radio galaxies detected by the Fermi-LAT, and a calculation of the core radio, total radio, and gamma-ray luminosities is followed through. A future step in extending this work would be to estimate the gamma-ray luminosity function of radio galaxies and their percent contribution to the total IGRB, based on the widely agreed upon assumption that a reasonable estimate of the gamma-ray luminosity function of a population can be attained by appropriately scaling its radio luminosity function, as gamma-ray luminosities and radio luminosities are strongly linearly correlated. This work has also provided the basis for such a calculation by outlining the theory and initial steps.
It is the hope that the vast scope of the gathered data, its simultaneity, and the use of consistent analysis methods across the sample, will provide an improved foundation for a future calculation of the contribution of this population to the IGRB, as well as encourage stricter requirements for multiwavelength studies.
Neural networks can synchronize by learning from each other. For that purpose they receive common inputs and exchange their outputs. Adjusting discrete weights according to a suitable learning rule then leads to full synchronization in a finite number of steps. It is also possible to train additional neural networks by using the inputs and outputs generated during this process as examples. Several algorithms for both tasks are presented and analyzed. In the case of Tree Parity Machines the dynamics of both processes is driven by attractive and repulsive stochastic forces. Thus it can be described well by models based on random walks, which represent either the weights themselves or order parameters of their distribution. However, synchronization is much faster than learning. This effect is caused by different frequencies of attractive and repulsive steps, as only neural networks interacting with each other are able to skip unsuitable inputs. Scaling laws for the number of steps needed for full synchronization and successful learning are derived using analytical models. They indicate that the difference between both processes can be controlled by changing the synaptic depth. In the case of bidirectional interaction the synchronization time increases proportional to the square of this parameter, but it grows exponentially, if information is transmitted in one direction only. Because of this effect neural synchronization can be used to construct a cryptographic key-exchange protocol. Here the partners benefit from mutual interaction, so that a passive attacker is usually unable to learn the generated key in time. The success probabilities of different attack methods are determined by numerical simulations and scaling laws are derived from the data. If the synaptic depth is increased, the complexity of a successful attack grows exponentially, but there is only a polynomial increase of the effort needed to generate a key. Therefore the partners can reach any desired level of security by choosing suitable parameters. In addition, the entropy of the weight distribution is used to determine the effective number of keys, which are generated in different runs of the key-exchange protocol using the same sequence of input vectors. If the common random inputs are replaced with queries, synchronization is possible, too. However, the partners have more control over the difficulty of the key exchange and the attacks. Therefore they can improve the security without increasing the average synchronization time.
In dieser Arbeit untersuchen wir die Produktion von Neutrinos in astrophysikalischen Quellen. Bei der Beschreibung der Wechselwirkung betrachten wir resonante, direkte und Multipion-Produktion. Zusätzlich berücksichtigen wir die Produktion von Neutronen und positiv geladenen Kaonen. Wir beachten explizit die Energieverluste der Sekundärteilchen - Pionen, Myonen und Kaonen - auf Grund von Synchrotronstrahlung derselben und adiabatischer Expansion. In Bezug auf den Neutrinofluss berücksichtigen wir Flavor-Mischungen der Neutrinos auf dem Weg zum Beobachter. Zunächst führen wir eine Analyse basierend auf einem generischen Quellmodell durch, in der wir den Einfluss von Magnetfeld und Größe der Quelle auf die Neutrinospektren und das Verhältnis der verschiedenen Neutrino-Flavor untersuchen. Es stellt sich heraus, dass man im Rahmen dieses generischen Modells verschiedene Regionen im Parameterraum anhand des Flavor-Verhältnisses, das für hohe Magnetfelder von dem zumeist angenommenen Verhältnis (nu_e:nu_mu:nu_tau)=(1:2:0) abweicht, klassifizieren kann. In einer zweiten Analyse bestimmen wir die erwarteten Neutrinospektren von Gammablitzen im Rahmen des Feuerball-Modells aus beobachteten Photonspektren. Es zeigt sich, dass auf Grund grober Abschätzungen in der Literatur, der Neutrinofluss zumeist um etwa eine Größenordnung überschätzt wird. Deshalb berechnen wir den erwarteten Neutrinofluss der Gammablitze neu, die während der 40-Leinen-Konfiguration des IceCube-Detektors gemessen wurden, und folgern, dass entgegen der Behauptung der IceCube-Kollaboration, das Feuerball-Modell noch nicht ausgeschlossen ist. Des Weiteren quantifizieren wir systematische und astrophysikalische Unsicherheiten in dem vorhergesagten Neutrinofluss.
Wir untersuchen zunächst das Hubbard-Modell des anisotropen Dreiecksgitters als effektive Beschreibung der Mott-Phase in verschiedenen organischen Verbindungen mit dreieckiger Gitterstruktur. Um die Eigenschaften am absoluten Nullpunkt zu bestimmen benutzen wir die variationelle Cluster Näherung (engl. variational cluster approximation VCA) und erhalten das Phasendiagramm als Funktion der Anisotropie und der Wechselwirkungsstärke. Wir finden für schwache Wechselwirkung ein Metall. Für starke Wechselwirkung finden wir je nach Stärke der Anisotropie eine Néel oder eine 120◦-Néel antiferromagnetische Ordnung. In einem Bereich mittlerer Wechselwirkung entsteht in der Nähe des isotropen Dreiecksgitters ein nichtmagnetischer Isolator. Der Metall-Isolator-Übergang hängt maßgeblich von der Anisotropie ab, genauso wie die Art der magnetischen Ordnung und das Erscheinen und die Ausdehnung der nichtmagnetischen Isolatorphase.
Spin-Bahn Kopplung ist der ausschlaggebende Parameter, der elektronische Bandmodelle in topologische Isolatoren wandelt. Spin-Bahn Kopplung im Allgemeinen beinhaltet auch den Rashba Term, der die SU(2) Symmetrie vollständig bricht. Sobald man auch Wechselwirkungen berücksichtigt, müssen sich viele theoretische Methoden auf die Analyse vereinfachter Modelle beschränken, die nur Spin-Bahn Kopplungen enthalten, welche die U(1) Symmetrie erhalten und damit eine Rashba Kopplung ausschließen. Wir versuchen diese bisher bestehende Lücke zu schließen und untersuchen das Kane-Mele Hubbard (KMH) Modell mit Rashba Spin-Bahn Kopplung und präsentieren eine systematische Analyse des Effekts der Rashba Spin-Bahn Kopplung in einem korrelierten zweidimensionalen topologischen Isolator. Wir wenden die VCA auf dieses Problem an und bestimmen das Phasendiagramm mit Wechselwirkung durch die Berechnung der lokalen Zustandsdichte, der Magnetisierung, der Einteilchenspektralfunktion und der Randzustände. Nach einer ausführlichen Auswertung des KMH-Modells, bei erhaltener U(1) Symmetrie, finden wir auch für endliche Wechselwirkung, dass eine zusätzliche Rashba Kopplung zu neuen elektronischen Phasen führt, wie eine metallische Phase und eine topologische Isolatorphase ohne Bandlücke in der lokalen Zustandsdichte, die aber eine direkte Bandlücke für jeden Wellenvektor besitzt.
Für eine Klasse von 5d Übergangsmetallen untersuchen wir ein KMH ähnliches Modell mit multidirektionaler Spin-Bahn Kopplung, das wegen seiner Relevanz für die Natrium-Iridate (engl. sodium iridate) als SI Modell bezeichnet wird. Diese intrinsische Kopplung bricht die SU(2) Symmetrie bereits vollständig und dennoch erhält man wegen der speziellen Form für starke Wechselwirkung wieder einen rotationssymmetrischen Néel-AFM Isolator. Der topologische Isolator des SIH-Modells ist adiabatisch mit dem des KMH-Modells verbunden, jedoch sind die Randströme hier nicht mehr spinpolarisiert.
Wir verallgemeinern das Konzept der Klein-Transformation, das bereits erfolgreich auf Spin-Hamiltonians angewandt wurde, und wenden es auf ein Hubbard-Modell mit rein imaginären spinabhängigen Hüpfen an, das im Grenzfall unendlicher Wechselwirkung in das Kitaev-Heisenberg Modell übergeht. Dadurch erhält man ein Modell des Dreiecksgitters mit reellen spinunabhängigen Hüpfen, das aber eine mehratomige Einheitszelle besitzt. Für schwache Wechselwirkung ist das System ein Dirac Halbmetall und für starke Wechselwirkung erhält man eine 120◦-Néel antiferromagnetische Ordnung. Für mittlere Wechselwirkung findet man aber einen relativ großen Bereich in dem eine nichtmagnetische Isolatorphase stabil ist. Unsere Ergebnisse deuten auf die mögliche Existenz einer Quanten Spinflüssigkeit hin.
It is generally agreed upon the fact that the Standard Model of particle physics can only be viewed as an effective theory that needs to be extended as it leaves some essential questions unanswered. The exact realization of the necessary extension is subject to discussion. Supersymmetry is among the most promising approaches to physics beyond the Standard Model as it can simultaneously solve the hierarchy problem and provide an explanation for the dark matter abundance in the universe. Despite further virtues like gauge coupling unification and radiative electroweak symmetry breaking, minimal supersymmetric models cannot be the ultimate answer to the open questions of the Standard Model as they still do not incorporate neutrino masses and are besides heavily constrained by LHC data. This does, however, not derogate the beauty of the concept of supersymmetry. It is therefore time to explore non-minimal supersymmetric models which are able to close these gaps, review their consistency, test them against experimental data and provide prospects for future experiments.
The goal of this thesis is to contribute to this process by exploring an extraordinarily well motivated class of models which bases upon a left-right symmetric gauge group. While relaxing the tension with LHC data, those models automatically include the ingredients for neutrino masses.
We start with a left-right supersymmetric model at the TeV scale in which scalar \(SU(2)_R\) triplets are responsible for the breaking of left-right symmetry as well as for the generation of neutrino masses. Although a tachyonic doubly-charged scalar is present at tree-level in this kind of models, we show by performing the first complete one-loop evaluation that it gains a real mass at the loop level. The constraints on the predicted additional charged gauge bosons are then evaluated using LHC data, and we find that we can explain small excesses in the data of which the current LHC run will reveal if they are actual new physics signals or just background fluctuations. In a careful evaluation of the loop-corrected scalar potential we then identify parameter regions in which the vacuum with the phenomenologically correct symmetry-breaking properties is stable. Conveniently, those regions favour low left-right symmetry breaking scales which are accessible at the LHC.
In a slightly modified version of this model where a \(U(1)_R × U(1)_{B−L}\) gauge symmetry survives down to the TeV scale, we implement a minimal gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking mechanism for which we calculate the boundary conditions in the presence of gauge kinetic mixing. We show how the presence of the extended gauge group raises the tree-level Higgs mass considerably so that the need for heavy supersymmetric spectra is relaxed. Taking the constraints from the Higgs sector into account, we then explore the LHC phenomenology of this model and point out where the expected collider signatures can be distinguished from standard scenarios.
In particular if neutrino masses are explained by low-scale seesaw mechanisms as is done throughout this work, there are potentially spectacular signals at low-energy experiments which search for charged lepton flavour violation. The last part of this thesis is dedicated to the detailed exploration of processes like μ → e γ, μ → 3 e or μ−e conversion in nuclei in a supersymmetric framework with an inverse seesaw mechanism. In particular, we disprove claims about a non-decoupling effect in Z-mediated three-body decays and study the prospects for discovering and distinguishing signals at near-future experiments. In this context we identify the possibility to deduce from ratios like BR(\(τ → 3 μ\))/BR(\(τ → μ e^+ e^−\)) whether the contributions from ν − W loops dominate over supersymmetric contributions or vice versa.
Over the past decades, noncommutative geometry has grown into an established field in pure mathematics and theoretical physics. The discovery that noncommutative geometry emerges as a limit of quantum gravity and string theory has provided strong motivations to search for physics beyond the standard model of particle physics and also beyond Einstein's theory of general relativity within the realm of noncommutative geometries. A very fruitful approach in the latter direction is due to Julius Wess and his group, which combines deformation quantization (star-products) with quantum group methods. The resulting gravity theory does not only include noncommutative effects of spacetime, but it is also invariant under a deformed Hopf algebra of diffeomorphisms, generalizing the principle of general covariance to the noncommutative setting. The purpose of the first part of this thesis is to understand symmetry reduction in noncommutative gravity, which then allows us to find exact solutions of the noncommutative Einstein equations. These are important investigations in order to capture the physical content of such theories and to make contact to applications in e.g. noncommutative cosmology and black hole physics. We propose an extension of the usual symmetry reduction procedure, which is frequently applied to the construction of exact solutions of Einstein's field equations, to noncommutative gravity and show that this leads to preferred choices of noncommutative deformations of a given symmetric system. We classify in the case of abelian Drinfel'd twists all consistent deformations of spatially flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmologies and of the Schwarzschild black hole. The deformed symmetry structure allows us to obtain exact solutions of the noncommutative Einstein equations in many of our models, for which the noncommutative metric field coincides with the classical one. In the second part we focus on quantum field theory on noncommutative curved spacetimes. We develop a new formalism by combining methods from the algebraic approach to quantum field theory with noncommutative differential geometry. The result is an algebra of observables for scalar quantum field theories on a large class of noncommutative curved spacetimes. A precise relation to the algebra of observables of the corresponding undeformed quantum field theory is established. We focus on explicit examples of deformed wave operators and find that there can be noncommutative corrections even on the level of free field theories, which is not the case in the simplest example of the Moyal-Weyl deformed Minkowski spacetime. The convergent deformation of simple toy-models is investigated and it is shown that these quantum field theories have many new features compared to formal deformation quantization. In addition to the expected nonlocality, we obtain that the relation between the deformed and the undeformed quantum field theory is affected in a nontrivial way, leading to an improved behavior of the noncommutative quantum field theory at short distances, i.e. in the ultraviolet. In the third part we develop elements of a more powerful, albeit more abstract, mathematical approach to noncommutative gravity. The goal is to better understand global aspects of homomorphisms between and connections on noncommutative vector bundles, which are fundamental objects in the mathematical description of noncommutative gravity. We prove that all homomorphisms and connections of the deformed theory can be obtained by applying a quantization isomorphism to undeformed homomorphisms and connections. The extension of homomorphisms and connections to tensor products of modules is clarified, and as a consequence we are able to add tensor fields of arbitrary type to the noncommutative gravity theory of Wess et al. As a nontrivial application of the new mathematical formalism we extend our studies of exact noncommutative gravity solutions to more general deformations.
The basic question which drove our whole work was to find a meaningful noncommutative gauge theory even for the time-like case ($\theta^{0 i} \neq 0$). In order to be able to tackle questions regarding unitarity, it is not sufficient to consider theories which include the noncommutative parameter only up to a finite order. The reason is that in order to investigate tree-level unitarity or the optical theorem in loops one has to know the behavior of the noncommutative theory for center-of-mass energies much greater than the noncommutative scale. Therefore an effective theory, that is by construction only valid up to the noncommutative scale, isn't sufficient for our purpose. Our model is based on two fundamental assumptions. The first assumption is given by the commutation relations \eqref{eq:ncalg}. This led to the Moyal-Weyl star-product \eqref{eq:astproduct2} which replaces all point-like products between two fields. The second assumption is to assume that the model built this way is not only invariant under the noncommutative gauge transformation but also under the commutative one. In order to obtain an action of such a model one has to replace the fields by their appropriate \swms. We chose the gauge fixed action \eqref{eq:actioncgf} as the fundamental action of our model. After having constructed the action of the NCQED including the {\swms} we were confronted with the problem of calculating the {\swms} to all orders in $\tMN$. By means of \cite{bbg} we could calculate the {\swms} order by order in the gauge field, where each order in the gauge field contains all orders in the noncommutative parameter (\cf chapter \ref{chapter:swms}). By comparing the maps with the result we obtained from an alternative ansatz \cite{bcpvz}, we realized that already the simplest {\swm} for the gauge field is not unique. In chapter \ref{chapter:ambiguities} we examined this ambiguity, which we could parametrised by an arbitrary function $\astf$. The next step was to derive the Feynman rules for our NCQED. One finds that the propagators remain unchanged so that the free theory is equal to the commutative QED. The fermion-fermion-photon vertex contains not only a phase factor coming from the Moyal-Weyl star-product but also two additional terms which have their origin in the \swms. Beside the 3-photon vertex which is already present in NCQED without {\swms} and which has also additional terms coming from the \swms, too, one has a contact vertex which couples two fermions with two photons. After having derived all the vertices we calculated the pair annihilation scattering process $e^+ e^- \rightarrow \gamma \gamma$ at Born level. By choosing the parameter $\kggg = 1$ (\cf section \ref{sec:represent}), we found that the amplitude of the pair annihilation process becomes equal to the amplitude of the NCQED without \swms. This means that, at least for this process, the NCQED excluding {\swms} is only a special case of NCQED including \swms. On the basis of the pair annihilation process, we afterwards investigated tree-level unitarity. In order to satisfy the tree-level unitarity we had to constrain the arbitrary function $\astf$. We found that the series expansion of $\astf$ has to start with unity. In addition, the even part of the function must not increase faster than $s^{-1/2} \log(s)$ for $s \rightarrow \infty$, whereas the odd part of the $\astf$-function can't be constrained, at least by the process we considered. By assuming these constrains for the $\astf$-function, we could show that tree-level unitarity is satisfied if one incorporates the uncertainties present in the energy and the momenta of the scattered particles, \ie the uncertainties of the center-of-mass energy and the scattering angles. This uncertainties are not exclusively present due to the finite experimental resolution. A delta-like center-of-mass energy as well as delta-like momenta are in general not possible because the scattered particles are never exact plane waves.
This thesis is concerned with the statistical physics of various systems far from thermal equilibrium, focusing on universal critical properties, scaling laws and the role of fluctuations. To this end we study several models which serve as paradigmatic examples, such as surface growth and non-equilibrium wetting as well as phase transitions into absorbing states. As a particular interesting example of a model with a non-conventional scaling behavior, we study a simplified model for pulsed laser deposition by rate equations and Monte Carlo simulations. We consider a set of equations, where islands are assumed to be point-like, as well as an improved one that takes the size of the islands into account. The first set of equations is solved exactly but its predictive power is restricted to the first few pulses. The improved set of equations is integrated numerically, is in excellent agreement with simulations, and fully accounts for the crossover from continuous to pulsed deposition. Moreover, we analyze the scaling of the nucleation density and show numerical results indicating that a previously observed logarithmic scaling does not apply. In order to understand the impact of boundaries on critical phenomena, we introduce particle models displaying a boundary-induced absorbing state phase transition. These are one-dimensional systems consisting of a single site (the boundary) where creation and annihilation of particles occur, while particles move diffusively in the bulk. We study different versions of these models and confirm that, except for one exactly solvable bosonic variant exhibiting a discontinuous transition with trivial exponents, all the others display a non-trivial behavior, with critical exponents differing from their mean-field values, representing a universality class. We show that these systems are related to a $(0+1)$-dimensional non-Markovian model, meaning that in nonequilibrium a phase transition can take place even in zero dimensions, if time long-range interactions are considered. We argue that these models constitute the simplest universality class of phase transition into an absorbing state, because the transition is induced by the dynamics of a single site. Moreover, this universality class has a simple field theory, corresponding to a zero dimensional limit of direct percolation with L{\'e}vy flights in time. Another boundary phenomena occurs if a nonequilibrium growing interface is exposed to a substrate, in this case a nonequilibrium wetting transition may take place. This transition can be studied through Langevin equations or discrete growth models. In the first case, the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation, which defines a very robust universality class for nonequilibrium moving interfaces, is combined with a soft-wall potential. While in the second, microscopic models, in the corresponding universality class, with evaporation and deposition of particles in the presence of hard-wall are studied. Equilibrium wetting is related to a particular case of the problem, corresponding to the Edwards-Wilkinson equation with a potential in the continuum approach or to the fulfillment of detailed balance in the microscopic models. In this thesis we present the analytical and numerical methods used to investigate the problem and the very rich behavior that is observed with them. The entropy production for a Markov process with a nonequilibrium stationary state is expected to give a quantitative measure of the distance form equilibrium. In the final chapter of this thesis, we consider a Kardar-Parisi-Zhang interface and investigate how entropy production varies with the interface velocity and its dependence on the interface slope, which are quantities that characterize how far the stationary state of the interface is away from equilibrium. We obtain results in agreement with the idea that the entropy production gives a measure of the distance from equilibrium. Moreover we use the same model to study fluctuation relations. The fluctuation relation is a symmetry in the large deviation function associated to the probability of the variation of entropy during a fixed time interval. We argue that the entropy and height are similar quantities within the model we consider and we calculate the Legendre transform of the large deviation function associated to the height for small systems. We observe that there is no fluctuation relation for the height, nevertheless its large deviation function is still symmetric.
Quantum theory is considered to be the most fundamental and most accurate physical theory of today. Although quantum theory is conceptually difficult to understand, its mathematical structure is quite simple. What determines this particularly simple and elegant mathematical structure? In short: Why is quantum theory as it is?
Addressing such questions is the aim of investigating the foundations of quantum theory. In the past this field of research was sometimes considered as an academic subject without much practical impact. However, with the emergence of quantum information theory this perception has changed significantly and both fields started to fruitfully influence each other. Today fundamental aspects of quantum theory attract increasing attention and the field belongs to the most exciting subjects of theoretical physics.
This thesis is concerned with a particular branch in this field, namely, with so-called Generalized Probabilistic Theories (GPTs), which provide a unified theoretical framework in which classical and quantum theory emerge as special cases. This is used to examine nonlocal features that help to distinguish quantum theory from alternative toy theories. In order to extend the scope of theories that can be examined with the framework, we also introduce several generalizations to the framework itself.
We start in Chapter 1 with introducing the standard GPT framework and summarize previous results, based on a review paper of the author [New J. Phys. 13, 063024 (2011)]. To keep the introduction accessible to a broad readership, we follow a constructive approach. Starting from few basic physically motivated assumptions we show how a given set of observations can be manifested in an operational theory. Furthermore, we characterize consistency conditions limiting the range of possible extensions. We point out that non-classical features of single systems can equivalently result from higher dimensional classical theories that have been restricted. Entanglement and non-locality, however, are shown to be genuine non-classical features. We review features that have been found to be specific for quantum theory separably or single and joint systems.
Chapter 2 incorporates results published in [J. Phys. A 47(32), pp. 1-32 (2014)] and [Proc. QPL 2011 via EPTCS vol. 95, pp. 183–192 (2012)]. The GPT framework is applied to show how the structure of local state spaces indirectly affects possible nonlocal correlations, which are global properties of a theory. These correlations are stronger than those possible in a classical theory, but happen to show different restrictions that can be linked to the structure of subsystems. We first illustrate the phenomenon with toy theories with particular local state spaces. We than show that a particular class of joint states (inner product states), whose existence depends on geometrical properties of the local subsystems, can only have correlations for a known limited set called Q1. All bipartite correlations of both, quantum and classical correlations, can be mapped to measurement statistics from such joint states.
Chapter 3 shows unpublished results on entanglement swapping in GPTs. This protocol, which is well known in quantum information theory, allows to nonlocally transfer entanglement to initially unentangled parties with the help of a third party that shares entanglement with each. We review our approach published in [Proc. QPL 2011 via EPTCS vol. 95, pp. 183–192 (2012)], which mimics the joint systems' structure of quantum theory by modifying a popular toy theory known as boxworld. However, it is illustrated that this approach fails for bigger multipartite systems due to inconsistencies evoked by entanglement swapping. It turns out that the GPT framework does not allow entanglement swapping for general subsystems with two-dimensional state spaces with transitive pure states. Altering the GPT framework to allow completely globally degrees of freedom, however, enables us to construct consistent entanglement swapping for these subsystems. This construction resembles the situation in quantum theory on a real Hilbert space.
A questionable assumption usually taken in the standard GPT framework is the so-called no-restriction hypothesis. It states that the measurement that are possible in a theory can be derived from the state space. In fact, this assumption seems to exist for reasons of mathematical convenience, but it seems to lack physical motivation. We generalize the GPT framework to also account for systems that do not obey the no-restriction hypothesis in Chapter 4, which presents results published in [Phys. Rev. A 87, 052131 (2013)] and [Proc. QPL 2013, to be published in EPTCS]. The extended framework includes new classes of probabilistic theories. As an example, we show how to construct theories that include intrinsic noise. We also provide a "self-dualization" procedure that requires the violation of the no-restriction hypothesis. This procedure restricts the measurement of arbitrary theories such that the theories act as if they were self-dual. Self-duality has recently gathered lots of interest, since such theories share many features of quantum theory. For example Tsirelson’s bound holds for correlations on the maximally entangled state in these theories. Finally, we characterize the maximal set of joint states that can be consistently defined for given subsystems. This generalizes the maximal tensor product of the standard GPT framework.
This thesis presents results covering several topics in correlated many fermion systems. A Monte Carlo technique (CT-INT) that has been implemented, used and extended by the author is discussed in great detail in chapter 3. The following chapter discusses how CT-INT can be used to calculate the two particle Green’s function and explains how exact frequency summations can be obtained. A benchmark against exact diagonalization is presented. The link to the dynamical cluster approximation is made in the end of chapter 4, where these techniques are of immense importance. In chapter 5 an extensive CT-INT study of a strongly correlated Josephson junction is shown. In particular, the signature of the first order quantum phase transition between a Kondo and a local moment regime in the Josephson current is discussed. The connection to an experimental system is made with great care by developing a parameter extraction strategy. As a final result, we show that it is possible to reproduce experimental data from a numerically exact CT-INT model-calculation. The last topic is a study of graphene edge magnetism. We introduce a general effective model for the edge states, incorporating a complicated interaction Hamiltonian and perform an exact diagonalization study for different parameter regimes. This yields a strong argument for the importance of forbidden umklapp processes and of the strongly momentum dependent interaction vertex for the formation of edge magnetism. Additional fragments concerning the use of a Legendre polynomial basis for the representation of the two particle Green’s function, the analytic continuation of the self energy for the Anderson Kane Mele Model, as well as the generation of test data with a given covariance matrix are documented in the appendix. A final appendix provides some very important matrix identities that are used for the discussion of technical details of CT-INT.
In this thesis, we investigate several topics pertaining to emergent collective quantum phenomena in the domain of correlated fermions, using the quantum Monte Carlo method. They display exotic low temperature phases as well as phase transitions which are beyond the Landau–Ginzburg theory. The interplay between three key points is crucial for us: fermion statistics, many body effects and topology. We highlight the following several achievements: 1. Successful modeling of continuum field theories with lattice Hamiltonians, 2. their sign-problem-free Monte Carlo simulations of these models, 3. and numerical results beyond mean field descriptions. First, we consider a model of Dirac fermions with a spin rotational invariant inter- action term that dynamically generates a quantum spin Hall insulator. Surprisingly, an s-wave superconducting phase emerges due to the condensation of topological de- fects of the spin Hall order parameter. When particle-hole symmetry is present, the phase transition between the topological insulator and the superconducting phase is an example of a deconfined quantum critical point(DQCP). Although its low energy effec- tive field theory is purely bosonic, the exact conservation law of the skyrmion number operator rules out the possibility of realizing this critical point in lattice boson models. This work is published in Ref. [1]. Second, we dope the dynamically generated quantum spin Hall insulator mentioned above. Hence it is described by a field theory without Lorentz invariance due to the lack of particle-hole symmetry. This sheds light on the extremely hot topic of twisted bilayergraphene: Why is superconductivity generated when the repulsive Coulomb interaction is much stronger than the electron-phonon coupling energy scale? In our case, Cooper pairs come from the topological skyrmion defects of the spin current order parameter, which are charged. Remarkably, the nature of the phase transition is highly non-mean-field-like: one is not allowed to simply view pairs of electrons as single bosons in a superfluid-Mott insulator transition, since the spin-current order parameter can not be ignored. Again, due to the aforementioned skyrmions, the two order parameters are intertwined: One phase transition occurs between the two symmetry breaking states. This work is summarized in Ref. [2]. Third, we investigate the 2 + 1 dimensional O(5) nonlinear sigma model with a topological Wess-Zumino-Witten term. Remarkably, we are able to perform Monte Carlo calculations with a UV cutoff given by the Dirac Landau level quantization. It is a successful example of simulating a continuous field theory without lattice regularization which leads to an additional symmetry breaking. The Dirac background and the five anti-commuting Dirac mass terms naturally introduce the picture of a non-trivial Berry phase contribution in the parameter space of the five component order parameter. Using the finite size scaling method given by the flux quantization, we find a stable critical phase in the low stiffness region of the sigma model. This is a candidate ground state of DQCP when the O(5) symmetry breaking terms are irrelevant at the critical point. Again, it has a bosonic low energy field theory which is seemingly unable to be realized in pure boson Hamiltonians. This work is summarized in Ref. [3].
Numerical Simulations of Heavy Fermion Systems: From He-3 Bilayers to Topological Kondo Insulators
(2014)
Even though heavy fermion systems have been studied for a long time, a strong interest in heavy fermions persists to this day. While the basic principles of local moment formation, Kondo effect and formation of composite quasiparticles leading to a Fermi liquid, are under- stood, there remain many interesting open questions. A number of issues arise due to the interplay of heavy fermion physics with other phenomena like magnetism and superconduc- tivity.
In this regard, experimental and theoretical investigations of He-3 can provide valuable insights. He-3 represents a unique realization of a quantum liquid. The fermionic nature of He-3 atoms, in conjunction with the absence of long-range Coulomb repulsion, makes this material an ideal model system to study Fermi liquid behavior.
Bulk He-3 has been investigated for quite some time. More recently, it became possible to prepare and study layered He-3 systems, in particular single layers and bilayers. The pos- sibility of tuning various physical properties of the system by changing the density of He-3 and using different substrate materials makes layers of He-3 an ideal quantum simulator for investigating two-dimensional Fermi liquid phenomenology.
In particular, bilayers of He-3 have recently been found to exhibit heavy fermion behavior. As a function of temperature, a crossover from an incoherent state with decoupled layers to a coherent Fermi liquid of composite quasiparticles was observed. This behavior has its roots in the hybridization of the two layers. The first is almost completely filled and subject to strong correlation effects, while the second layer is only partially filled and weakly correlated. The quasiparticles are formed due to the Kondo screening of localized moments in the first layer by the second-layer delocalized fermions, which takes place at a characteristic temperature scale, the coherence scale Tcoh.
Tcoh can be tuned by changing the He-3 density. In particular, at a certain critical filling,
the coherence scale is expected to vanish, corresponding to a divergence of the quasiparticle effective mass, and a breakdown of the Kondo effect at a quantum critical point. Beyond the critical point, the layers are decoupled. The first layer is a local moment magnet, while the second layer is an itinerant overlayer.
However, already at a filling smaller than the critical value, preempting the critical point, the onset of a finite sample magnetization was observed. The character of this intervening phase remained unclear.
Motivated by these experimental observations, in this thesis the results of model calcula- tions based on an extended Periodic Anderson Model are presented. The three particle ring exchange, which is the dominant magnetic exchange process in layered He-3, is included in the model. It leads to an effective ferromagnetic interaction between spins on neighboring sites. In addition, the model incorporates the constraint of no double occupancy by taking the limit of large local Coulomb repulsion.
By means of Cellular DMFT, the model is investigated for a range of values of the chemical potential µ and inverse temperature β = 1/T . The method is a cluster extension to the Dy- namical Mean-Field Theory (DMFT), and allows to systematically include non-local correla- tions beyond the DMFT. The auxiliary cluster model is solved by a hybridization expansion CTQMC cluster solver, which provides unbiased, numerically exact results for the Green’s function and other observables of interest.
As a first step, the onset of Fermi liquid coherence is studied. At low enough temperature, the self-energy is found to exhibit a linear dependence on Matsubara frequency. Meanwhile, the spin susceptibility crossed over from a Curie-Weiss law to a Pauli law. Both observations serve as fingerprints of the Fermi liquid state.
The heavy fermion state appears at a characteristic coherence scale Tcoh. This scale depends strongly on the density. While it is rather high for small filling, for larger filling Tcoh is increas- ingly suppressed. This involves a decreasing quasiparticle residue Z ∼ Tcoh and an enhanced mass renormalization m∗/m ∼ Tcoh−1. Extrapolation leads to a critical filling, where the co-
herence scale is expected to vanish at a quantum critical point. At the same time, the effective mass diverges. This corresponds to a breakdown of the Kondo effect, which is responsible for the formation of quasiparticles, due to a vanishing of the effective hybridization between the layers.
Taking only single-site DMFT results into account, the above scenario seems plausible. However, paramagnetic DMFT neglects the ring exchange interaction completely. In or- der to improve on this, Cellular DMFT simulations are conducted for small clusters of size Nc = 2 and 3. The results paint a different physical picture. The ring exchange, by favor- ing a ferromagnetic alignment of spins, competes with the Kondo screening. As a result, strong short-range ferromagnetic fluctuations appear at larger values of µ. By lowering the temperature, these fluctuations are enhanced at first. However, for T < Tcoh they are increas- ingly suppressed, which is consistent with Fermi liquid coherence. However, beyond a certain threshold value of µ, fluctuations persist to the lowest temperatures. At the same time, while not apparent in the DMFT results, the total occupation n increases quite strongly in a very narrow range around the same value of µ. The evolution of n with µ is always continuous, but hints at a discontinuity in the limit Nc → ∞. This first-order transition breaks the Kondo effect. Beyond the transition, a ferromagnetic state in the first layer is established, and the second layer becomes a decoupled overlayer.
These observations provide a quite appealing interpretation of the experimental results. As a function of chemical potential, the Kondo breakdown quantum critical point is preempted by a first-order transition, where the layers decouple and the first layer turns into a ferromagnet. In the experimental situation, where the filling can be tuned directly, the discontinuous transition is mirrored by a phase separation, which interpolates between the Fermi liquid ground state at lower filling and the magnetic state at higher filling. This is precisely the range of the intervening phase found in the experiments, which is characterized by an onset of a finite sample magnetization.
Besides the interplay of heavy fermion physics and magnetic exchange, recently the spin- orbit coupling, which is present in many heavy fermion materials, attracted a lot of interest. In the presence of time-reversal symmetry, due to spin-orbit coupling, there is the possibility of a topological ground state.
It was recently conjectured that the energy scale of spin-orbit coupling can become dom- inant in heavy fermion materials, since the coherence scale and quasiparticle bandwidth are rather small. This can lead to a heavy fermion ground state with a nontrivial band topology; that is, a topological Kondo insulator (TKI). While being subject to strong correlation effects, this state must be adiabatically connected to a non-interacting, topological state.
The idea of the topological ground state realized in prototypical Kondo insulators, in par- ticular SmB6, promises to shed light on some of the peculiarities of these materials, like a residual conductivity at the lowest temperatures, which have remained unresolved so far.
In this work, a simple two-band model for two-dimensional topological Kondo insulators is devised, which is based on a single Kramer’s doublet coupled to a single conduction band. The model is investigated in the presence of a Hubbard interaction as a function of interaction strength U and inverse temperature β. The bulk properties of the model are obtained by DMFT, with a hybridization expansion CTQMC impurity solver. The DMFT approximation of a local self-energy leads to a very simple way of computing the topological invariant.
The results show that with increasing U the system can be driven through a topological phase transition. Interestingly, the transition is between distinct topological insulating states, namely the Γ-phase and M-phase. This appearance of different topological phases is possible due to the symmetry of the underlying square lattice. By adiabatically connecting both in- teracting states with the respective non-interacting state, it is shown that the transition indeed drives the system from the Γ-phase to the M-phase.
A different behavior can be observed by pushing the bare position of the Kramer’s doublet to higher binding energies. In this case, the non-interacting starting point has a trivial band topology. By switching on the interaction, the system can be tuned through a quantum phase transition, with a closing of the band gap. Upon reopening of the band gap, the system is in the Γ-phase, i. e. a topological insulator. By increasing the interaction strength further, the system moves into a strongly correlated regime. In fact, close to the expected transition to the M phase, the mass renormalization becomes quite substantial. While absent in the para- magnetic DMFT simulations conducted, it is conceivable that instead of a topological phase transition, the system undergoes a time-reversal symmetry breaking, magnetic transition.
The regime of strong correlations is studied in more detail as a function of temperature, both in the bulk and with open boundary conditions. A quantity which proved very useful is the bulk topological invariant Ns, which can be generalized to finite interaction strength and temperature. In particular, it can be used to define a temperature scale T ∗ for the onset of the topological state. Rescaling the results for Ns, a nice data collapse of the results for different values of U, from the local moment regime to strongly mixed valence, is obtained. This hints at T ∗ being a universal low energy scale in topological Kondo insulators. Indeed, by comparing T ∗ with the coherence scale extracted from the self-energy mass renormalization, it is found that both scales are equivalent up to a constant prefactor. Hence, the scale T ∗ obtained from the temperature dependence of topological properties, can be used as an independent measure for Fermi liquid coherence. This is particularly useful in the experimentally relevant mixed valence regime, where charge fluctuations cannot be neglected. Here, a separation of the energy scales related to spin and charge fluctuations is not possible.
The importance of charge fluctuations becomes evident in the extent of spectral weight transfer as the temperature is lowered. For mixed valence, while the hybridization gap emerges, a substantial amount of spectral weight is shifted from the vicinity of the Fermi level to the lower Hubbard band. In contrast, this effect is strongly suppressed in the local moment regime.
In addition to the bulk properties, the spectral function for open boundaries is studied as a function of temperature, both in the local moment and mixed valence regime. This allows an investigation of the emergence of topological edge states with temperature. The method used here is the site-dependent DMFT, which is a generalization of the conventional DMFT to inhomogeneous systems. The hybridization expansion CTQMC algorithm is used as impurity solver.
By comparison with the bulk results for the topological quantity Ns, it is found that the
temperature scale for the appearance of the topological edge states is T ∗, both in the mixed valence and local moment regime.
In this thesis, we investigate aspects of the physics of heavy-fermion systems and correlated topological insulators.
We numerically solve the interacting Hamiltonians that model the physical systems using quantum Monte Carlo algorithms
to access both ground-state and finite-temperature observables.
Initially, we focus on the metamagnetic transition in the Kondo lattice model for heavy fermions.
On the basis of the dynamical mean-field theory and the dynamical cluster approximation,
our calculations point towards a continuous transition, where the signatures of metamagnetism are linked to a Lifshitz transition of heavy-fermion bands.
In the second part of the thesis, we study various aspects of magnetic pi fluxes in the Kane-Mele-Hubbard model of a correlated topological insulator.
We describe a numerical measurement of the topological index, based on the localized mid-gap states that are provided by pi flux insertions.
Furthermore, we take advantage of the intrinsic spin degree of freedom of a pi flux to devise instances of interacting quantum spin systems.
In the third part of the thesis, we introduce and characterize the Kane-Mele-Hubbard model on the pi flux honeycomb lattice.
We place particular emphasis on the correlations effects along the one-dimensional boundary of the lattice and
compare results from a bosonization study with finite-size quantum Monte Carlo simulations.
In a first part the bilayer Heisenberg Model and the 2D Kondo necklace model are studied. Both models exhibit a quantum phase transition between an ordered and disordered phase. The question is addressed to the coupling of a single doped hole to the critical fluctuations. A self-consistent Born approximation predicts that the doped hole couples to the magnons such that the quasiparticle residue vanishes at the quantum critical point. In this work the delicate question about the fate of the quasiparticle residue across the quantum phase transition is also tackled by means of large scale quantum Monte Carlo simulations. Furthermore the dynamics of a single hole doped in the magnetic background is investigated. In the second part an analysis of the spiral staircase Heisenberg ladder is presented. The ladder consists of two ferromagnetic coupled spin-1/2 chains, where the coupling within the second chain can be tuned by twisting the ladder. Within this model the crossover between an ungapped spin-1/2 system and a gapped spin-1 system can be studied. In this work the emphasis is on the opening of the spin gap with respect to the ferromagnetic rung coupling. It is shown that there are essential differences in the scaling behavior of the spin gap depending on the twist of the model. Moreover, by means of the string order parameter it is shown, that the system remains in the Haldane phase within the whole parameter range although the spin gap scales differently. The tools which are used for the analyses are mainly large scale quantum Monte Carlo methods, but also exact diagonalization techniques as well as mean field approaches.
Hochenergetische solare Teilchen werden bei ihrem Transport durch die Heliosphäre an turbulenten Magnetfeldern gestreut. Für das Verständnis dieses Streuprozesses ergeben sich aus heutiger Sicht zwei wesentliche Hindernisse: - Bei der Streuung hochenergetischer Teilchen an turbulenten Magnetfeldern handelt es sich um einen nichtlinearen Prozess, der durch analytische Theorien kaum zu beschreiben ist. - Der Streuprozess hängt stark von den tatsächlichen Magnetfeldern und somit auch von der Magnetfeldturbulenz ab. Unser bisheriges Verständnis der heliosphärischen Turbulenz ist leider aufgrund spärlicher experimenteller Daten deutlich eingeschränkt, was eine qualifizierte Umsetzung in analytischen und numerischen Ansätzen deutlich erschwert. Dies machte in der Vergangenheit künstliche Annahmen für die Modellerstellung notwendig. In dieser Arbeit wird der Teilchentransport mit Hilfe der Simulation von Testteilchen in einem turbulenten, magnetohydrodynamischen Plasma untersucht. Durch die Testteilchen werden auch die nichtlinearen Streuprozesse korrekt wiedergegeben, wodurch das erste hier genannte Hindernis überwunden wird. Dies wurde auch bereits in früheren numerischen Untersuchungen erfolgreich angewendet. Die Modellierung der Turbulenz für den Fall des Teilchentransports erfolgt in dieser Arbeit erstmalig auf Grundlage der magnetohydrodynamischen Gleichungen. Dabei handelt es sich um die mathematisch korrekte Wiedergabe der Magnetfeldturbulenz unterhalb der Ionen-Gyrofrequenz mit nur geringen numerischen Einschränkungen. Darüber hinaus erlaubt ein auf das physikalische Szenario anpassbarer Turbulenztreiber eine noch realistischere Simulation der Turbulenz. Durch diesen universell gültigen, numerischen Ansatz können für das zweite hier angegebene Hindernis jegliche künstlichen Annahmen vermieden werden. Die drei im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erstmals zusammengeführten Methoden (Testteilchen, magnetohydrodynamische Turbulenz, Turbulenztreiber) ermöglichen somit eine Untersuchung und Analyse von Transport- und Turbulenzphänomenen mit herausragender Qualität, die insbesondere für den Fall des Teilchentransports einen direkten Anschluss an experimentelle Ergebnisse ermöglichen. Wichtige Ergebnisse im Rahmen dieser Arbeit sind: - der Nachweis der Drei-Wellen-Wechselwirkung für schwache und einsetzende starke Turbulenz. - eine Analyse der Anisotropie der Turbulenz im Bezug auf das Hintergrundmagnetfeld in Abhängigkeit vom Treibmodell. Insbesondere die Anisotropie ist experimentell bislang kaum erfassbar. - eine Untersuchung der Auswirkung der Gyroresonanzen auf die Diffusionskoeffizienten hochenergetischer solarer Teilchen in allgemeiner Form. - die Simulation des Teilchentransports in der Heliosphäre auf Grundlage experimenteller Messdaten. Die genauere Analyse der Simulationsergebnisse ermöglicht insgesamt einen Zugang zum Verständnis des Transports, der durch experimentelle Untersuchungen nicht erfassbar ist. Bei der Simulation wurden lediglich die Magnetfeldstärke sowie die untersuchte Teilchenenergie vorgegeben. Aus der Analyse der Simulationsergebnisse ergibt sich dieselbe mittlere freie Weglänge, wie sie auch durch andere Verfahren direkt aus den Messergebnissen gewonnen werden konnte. Auch die vorwiegende Ausrichtung der hochenergetischen Teilchen parallel und antiparallel zum Hintergrundmagnetfeld in der Simulation entspricht experimentellen Untersuchungen. Es zeigt sich, dass diese allein aus den resonanten Streuprozessen der Teilchen mit den Magnetfeldern resultiert. Des Weiteren werden die Art der Diffusion, der Energieverlust der Teilchen während des Transportprozesses sowie die Gültigkeit der quasilinearen Theorie untersucht.
At the beginning of regular observations with the MAGIC telescope in December 2004, all but one extragalactic sources detected at very high energy (VHE) gamma-rays belonged to the class of high frequency peaked BL Lac (HBL) objects. This motivated a systematic scan of candidate sources to increase the number of known sources and to study systematically their spectral properties. As candidate sources for VHE emission, X-ray bright HBLs were selected from a compilation of active galactic nuclei. The MAGIC observations took place from December 2004 to March 2006. The declination of the objects was restricted to values between -1.2° and +58.8° corresponding to a maximum zenith distance lower than 30° at culmination. Since gamma-rays are absorbed by photo-pair production in low energy background radiation fields, the redshift of the investigated objects was limitetd to z < 0.3. Under the assumption that HBLs generally emit the same energy flux at 1keV as at 200GeV, only the brightest X-ray sources were observed, leading to a cut in the X-ray flux of F(1keV) > 2µJy}. Of the fourteen sources observed, four have been detected: 1ES 1218+304 (for the first time at very high energies), 1ES 2344+514 (strong detection in a state of low activity), Mrk 421 and Mrk 501. A hint of a signal on a 3-sigma-level from the direction of 1ES 1011+496 has been observed. In the meantime the object has been confirmed as a source of VHE gamma-rays by a second MAGIC observation campaign triggered by an optical outburst. For ten sources, upper limits on their integral fluxes above 200GeV have been calculated on a 99% confidence level. To cross calibrate the different data samples, collected during 14 months, bright muon ring images have been used, recorded as background events by the MAGIC telescope. Based on the development by Meyer (2003), the method has been improved and implemented into the automatic data analysis as a continuous monitor of the calibration and the point spread function of the optical system. While the ring images are generated by muons with small impact parameters, it could be shown that the image parameter distributions for muons with large impact parameters and gamma showers completely overlap, revealing these muons as the dominant background for gamma-ray observations below energies of 150GeV. The sample of HBLs (including all HBLs detected at VHE so far) has been investigated for correlations between broad-band spectral indices as determined from simultaneous optical, archival X-ray and radio luminosities, finding that the VHE emitting HBLs do not differ from the non-detected ones. In general the absorption corrected HBL gamma-ray luminosities at 200GeV are not higher than their X-ray luminosities at 1keV. Based on a complete X-ray BL Lac sample, the Hamburg/ROSAT X-ray BL Lac sample, the number of expected VHE sources has been estimated for the performed scan, finding a consistent number under the assumption of a 37% completeness of the investigated sample and a 1keV-to-200GeV luminosity ratio of 1.4. An upper limit on the omnidirectional flux at 200GeV has been calculated by interpolating the sum over the observed fluxes and upper limits. Within the uncertainties, the result is in agreement with the expectations derived from the X-ray luminosity function of BL Lacs. For 1ES 1218+304 and 1ES 2344+514 the lightcurves have been derived, showing evidence for flux variability on a time scale of 17 days and 24h, respectively. In the case of 1ES 1218+304 variability has been reported for the first time at VHEs. For both sources the energy spectra have been reconstructed and discussed in the context of their broad band spectral energy distribution (SED), using a single zone synchrotron self Compton model. The SEDs are well fitted by the simulation even though the very high peak frequencies at gamma-rays push the model to its limits. The parameters derived from the simulation are in good agreement with the parameters found for similar HBLs.
Blazars are among the most luminous sources in the universe. Their extreme short-time variability indicates emission processes powered by a supermassive black hole. With the current generation of Imaging Air Cherenkov Telescopes, these sources are explored at very high energies. Lowering the threshold below 100 GeV and improving the sensitivity of the telescopes, more and more blazars are discovered in this energy regime. For the MAGIC telescope, a low energy analysis has been developed allowing to reach energies of 50 GeV for the first time. The method is presented in this thesis at the example of PG 1553+113 measuring a spectrum between 50 GeV and 900 GeV. In the energy regime observed by MAGIC, strong attenuation of the gamma-rays is expected from pair production due to interactions of gamma-rays with low-energy photons from the extragalactic background light. For PG 1553+113, this provides the possibility to constrain the redshift of the source, which is still unknown. Well studied from radio to x-ray energies, PG 1553+113 was discovered in 2005 in the very high energy regime. In total, it was observed with the MAGIC telescope for 80~hours between April 2005 and April 2007. From more than three years of data taking, the MAGIC telescope provides huge amounts of data and a large number of files from various sources. To handle this data volume and to provide monitoring of the data quality, an automatic procedure is essential. Therefore, a concept for automatic data processing and management has been developed. Thanks to its flexibility, the concept is easily applicable to future projects. The implementation of an automatic analysis is running stable since three years in the data center in Würzburg and provides consistent results of all MAGIC data, i.e. equal processing ensures comparability. In addition, this database controlled system allows for easy tests of new analysis methods and re-processing of all data with a new software version at the push of a button. At any stage, not only the availability of the data and its processing status is known, but also a large set of quality parameters and results can be queried from the database, facilitating quality checks, data selection and continuous monitoring of the telescope performance. By using the automatic analysis, the whole data sample can be analyzed in a reasonable amount of time, and the analyzers can concentrate on interpreting the results instead. For PG 1553+113, the tools and results of the automatic analysis were used. Compared to the previously published results, the software includes improvements as absolute pointing correction, absolute light calibration and improved quality and background-suppression cuts. In addition, newly developed analysis methods taking into account timing information were used. Based on the automatically produced results, the presented analysis was enhanced using a special low energy analysis. Part of the data were affected by absorption due to the Saharan Air Layer, i.e. sanddust in the atmosphere. Therefore, a new method has been developed, correcting for the effect of this meteorological phenomenon. Applying the method, the affected data could be corrected for apparent flux variations and effects of absorption on the spectrum, allowing to use the result for further studies. This is especially interesting, as these data were taken during a multi-wavelength campaign. For the whole data sample of 54 hours after quality checks, a signal from the position of PG 1553+113 was found with a significance of 15 standard deviations. Fitting a power law to the combined spectrum between 75 GeV and 900 GeV, yields a spectral slope of 4.1 +/- 0.2. Due to the low energy analysis, the spectrum could be extended to below 50 GeV. Fitting down to 48 GeV, the flux remains the same, but the slope changes to 3.7 +/- 0.1. The determined daily light curve shows that the integral flux above 150 GeV is consistent with a constant flux. Also for the spectral shape no significant variability was found in three years of observations. In July 2006, a multi-wavelength campaign was performed. Simultaneous data from the x-ray satellite Suzaku, the optical telescope KVA and the two Cherenkov experiments MAGIC and H.E.S.S. are available. Suzaku measured for the first time a spectrum up to 30 keV. The source was found to be at an intermediate flux level compared to previous x-ray measurements, and no short time variability was found in the continuous data sample of 41.1 ksec. Also in the gamma regime, no variability was found during the campaign. Assuming a maximum slope of 1.5 for the intrinsic spectrum, an upper limit of z < 0.74 was determined by deabsorbing the measured spectrum for the attenuation of photons by the extragalactic background light. For further studies, a redshift of z = 0.3 was assumed. Collecting various data from radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, x-ray and gama-ray energies, a spectral energy distribution was determined, including the simultaneous data of the multi-wavelength campaign. Fitting the simultaneous data with different synchrotron-self-compton models shows that the observed spectral shape can be explained with synchrotron-self-compton processes. The best result was obtained with a model assuming a log-parabolic electron distribution.
The astronomical exploration at energies between 30\,GeV and $\lesssim$\,350\,GeV was the main motivation for building the \MAGIC-telescope. With its 17\,m \diameter\ mirror it is the worldwide largest imaging air-Cherenkov telescope. It is located at the Roque de los Muchachos at the Canary island of San Miguel de La Palma at 28.8$^\circ$\,N, 17.8$^\circ$\,W, 2200\,m a.s.l. The telescope detects Cherenkov light produced by relativistic electrons and positrons in air showers initiated by cosmic gamma-rays. The imaging technique is used to powerfully reject the background due to hadronically induced air showers from cosmic rays. Their inverse power-law energy-distribution leads to an increase of the event rate with decreasing energy threshold. For \MAGIC this implies a trigger rate in the order of 250\,Hz, and a correspondingly large data stream to be recorded and analyzed. A robust analysis software package, including the general framework \MARS, was developed and commissioned to allow automation, necessary for data taken under variable observing conditions. Since many of the astronomical sources of high-energy radiation, in particular the enigmatic gamma-ray bursts, are of a transient nature, the telescope was designed to allow repositioning in several tens of seconds, keeping a tracking accuracy of $\lesssim\,$0.01$^\circ$. Employing a starguider, a tracking accuracy of $\lesssim\,$1.3\,minutes of arc was obtained. The main class of sources at very high gamma-ray energies, known from previous imaging air-Cherenkov telescopes, are Active Galactic Nuclei with relativistic jets, the so-called high-peaked Blazars. Their spectrum is entirely dominated by non-thermal emission, spanning more than 15 orders of magnitude in energy, from radio to gamma-ray energies. Predictions based on radiation models invoking a synchrotron self-Compton or hadronic origin of the gamma-rays suggest, that a fairly large number of them should be detectable by \MAGIC. Promising candidates have been chosen from existing compilations, requiring high (synchrotron) X-ray flux, assumed to be related to a high (possibly inverse-Compton) flux at GeV energies, and a low distance, in oder to avoid strong attenuation due to pair-production in interactions with low-energy photons from the extragalactic background radiation along the line of sight. Based on this selection the first \AGN, emitting gamma-rays at 100\,GeV, 1ES\,1218+304 at a redshift of $z=0.182$, was discovered, one of the two farthest known \AGN emitting in the TeV energy region. In this context, the automated analysis chain was successfully demonstrated. The source was observed in January 2005 during six moonless nights for 8.2\,h. At the same time the collaborating \KVA-telescope, located near the \MAGIC site, observed in the optical band. The lightcurve calculated showed no day-to-day variability and is compatible with a constant flux of $F($\,$>$\,$100\,\mbox{GeV})=(8.7\pm1.4) \cdot 10^{-7}\,\mbox{m}^{-2}\,\mbox{s}^{-1}$ within the statistical errors. A differential spectrum between 87\,GeV and 630\,GeV was calculated and is compatible with a power law of $F_E(E) = (8.1\pm 2.1) \cdot 10^{-7}(E/\mbox{250\,GeV})^{-3.0\pm0.4}\,\mbox{TeV}^{-1}\,\mbox{m}^{-2}\,\mbox{s}^{-1}$ within the statistical errors. The spectrum emitted by the source was obtained by taking into account the attenuation due to pair-production with photons of the extragalactic background at low photon energies. A homogeneous, one-zone synchrotron self-Compton model has been fitted to the collected multi-wavelength data. Using the simultaneous optical data, a best fit model could be obtained from which some physical properties of the emitting plasma could be inferred. The result was compared with the so-called {\em Blazar sequence}.
This thesis contains two major parts: The first part introduces the reader into three independent concepts of treating strongly correlated many body physics. These are, on the analytical side the SO(5)-theory (Chap.3), which poses the general frame. On the numerical side these are the Stochastic Series Expansion (SSE) (Chap.1) and the Contractor Renormalization Group (CORE) approach (Chap. 2}). The central idea of this thesis was to combine these above concepts, in order to achieve a better understanding of the high-T_c superconductors (HTSC). The results obtained by this combination can be found in the second major part of this thesis (chapters 4 and 5). The main idea of this thesis, i.e., to combine the SO(5)-theory with the capabilities of bosonic Quantum-Monte Carlo simulations and those of the CORE approach, has been proven to be a very successful Ansatz. Two different approaches, one based on symmetry and one on renormalization-group arguments, motivate an effective bosonic Hamiltonian. In a subsequent step the effective Hamiltonian has been simulated efficiently using the SSE. The results reproduce salient experiments on high-T_c superconductors. In addition, it has been shown that the model can be extended to capture also charge ordering. These results also form a profound basis for further studies, for example one could address the open question of SO(5)-symmetry restoration at a multicritical point in the extended pSO(5) model, where longer ranged interactions are included.
Adding interactions to topological (non-)trivial free fermion systems can in general have four different effects: (i) In symmetry protected topological band insulators, the correlations may lead to the spontaneous breaking of some protecting symmetries by long-range order that gaps the topological boundary modes. (ii) In free fermion (semi-)metal, the interaction could vice versa also generate long-range order that in turn induces a topological mass term and thus generates non-trivial phases dynamically. (iii) Correlation might reduce the topological classification of free fermion systems by allowing adiabatic deformations between states of formerly distinct phases. (iv) Interaction can generate long-range entangled topological order in states such as quantum spin liquids or fractional quantum Hall states that cannot be represented by non-interacting systems. During the course of this thesis, we use numerically exact quantum Monte Carlo algorithms to study various model systems that (potentially) represent one of the four scenarios, respectively.
First, we investigate a two-dimensional $d_{xy}$-wave, spin-singlet superconductor, which is relevant for high-$T_c$ materials such as the cuprates. This model represents nodal topological superconductors and exhibits chiral flat-band edge states that are protected by time-reversal and translational invariance. We introduce the conventional Hubbard interaction along the edge in order to study their stability with respect to correlations and find ferromagnetic order in case of repulsive interaction as well as charge-density-wave order and/or additional $i$s-wave pairing for attractive couplings. A mean-field analysis that, for the first time, is formulated in terms of the Majorana edge modes suggests that any order has normal and superconducting contributions. For example, the ferromagnetic order appears in linear superposition with triplet pairing. This finding is well confirmed by the numerically exact quantum Monte Carlo investigation.
Second, we consider spinless electrons on a two-dimensional Lieb lattice that are subject to nearest-neighbor Coulomb repulsion. The low energy modes of the free fermion part constitute a spin-$1$ Dirac cone that might be gapped by several mass terms. One option breaks time-reversal symmetry and generates a topological Chern insulator, which mainly motivated this study. We employ two flavors of quantum Monte Carlo methods and find instead the formation of charge-density-wave order that breaks particle-hole symmetry. Additionally, due to sublattices of unequal size in Lieb lattices, this induces a finite chemical potential that drives the system away from half-filling. We argue that this mechanism potentially extends the range of solvable models with finite doping by coupling the Lieb lattice to the target system of interest.
Third, we construct a system with four layers of a topological insulators and interlayer correlation that respects one independent time-reversal and a unitary $\mathbb{Z}_2$ symmetry. Previous studies claim a reduced topological classification from $\mathbb{Z}$ to $\mathbb{Z}_4$, for example by gapping out degenerate zero modes in topological defects once the correlation term is designed properly. Our interaction is chosen according to this analysis such that there should exist an adiabatic deformation between states whose topological invariant differs by $\Delta w=\pm4$ in the free fermion classification. We use a projective quantum Monte Carlo algorithm to determine the ground-state phase diagram and find a symmetry breaking regime, in addition to the non-interacting semi-metal, that separates the free fermion insulators. Frustration reduces the size of the long-range ordered region until it is replaced by a first order phase transition. Within the investigated range of parameters, there is no adiabatic path deforming the formerly distinct free fermion states into each other. We conclude that the prescribed reduction rules, which often use the bulk-boundary correspondence, are necessary but not sufficient and require a more careful investigation.
Fourth, we study conduction electron on a honeycomb lattice that form a Dirac semi-metal Kondo coupled to spin-1/2 degrees of freedom on a Kagome lattice. The local moments are described by a variant of the Balents-Fisher-Girvin model that has been shown to host a ferromagnetic phase and a $\mathbb{Z}_2$ spin liquid at strong frustration. Here, we report the first numerical exact quantum Monte Carlo simulation of the Kondo-coupled system that does not exhibit the negative-sign problem. When the local moments form a ferromagnet, the Kondo coupling induces an anti-ferromagnetic mass term in the conduction-electron system. At large frustration, the Dirac cone remains massless and the spin system forms a $\mathbb{Z}_2$ spin liquid. Owing to the odd number of spins per unit cell, this constitutes a non-Fermi liquid that violates Luttinger's theorem which relates the Fermi volume to the particle density in a Fermi liquid. This phase is a specific realization of the so called 'fractional Fermi liquid` as it has been first introduced in the context of heavy fermion models.
In the course of the growth of the Internet and due to increasing availability of data, over the last two decades, the field of network science has established itself as an own area of research. With quantitative scientists from computer science, mathematics, and physics working on datasets from biology, economics, sociology, political sciences, and many others, network science serves as a paradigm for interdisciplinary research.
One of the major goals in network science is to unravel the relationship between topological graph structure and a network’s function. As evidence suggests, systems from the same fields, i.e. with similar function, tend to exhibit similar structure. However, it is still vague whether a similar graph structure automatically implies likewise function. This dissertation aims at helping to bridge this gap, while particularly focusing on the role of triadic structures.
After a general introduction to the main concepts of network science, existing work devoted to the relevance of triadic substructures is reviewed. A major challenge in modeling triadic structure is the fact that not all three-node subgraphs can be specified independently
of each other, as pairs of nodes may participate in multiple of those triadic subgraphs.
In order to overcome this obstacle, we suggest a novel class of generative network models based on so called Steiner triple systems. The latter are partitions of a graph’s vertices into pair-disjoint triples (Steiner triples). Thus, the configurations on Steiner triples can be specified independently of each other without overdetermining the network’s link
structure.
Subsequently, we investigate the most basic realization of this new class of models. We call it the triadic random graph model (TRGM). The TRGM is parametrized by a probability distribution over all possible triadic subgraph patterns. In order to generate a network instantiation of the model, for all Steiner triples in the system, a pattern is drawn from the distribution and adjusted randomly on the Steiner triple. We calculate the degree distribution of the TRGM analytically and find it to be similar to a Poissonian distribution. Furthermore, it is shown that TRGMs possess non-trivial triadic structure. We discover inevitable correlations in the abundance of certain triadic subgraph
patterns which should be taken into account when attributing functional relevance to particular motifs – patterns which occur significantly more frequently than expected at random. Beyond, the strong impact of the probability distributions on the Steiner triples on the occurrence of triadic subgraphs over the whole network is demonstrated. This interdependence allows us to design ensembles of networks with predefined triadic substructure. Hence, TRGMs help to overcome the lack of generative models needed for assessing the relevance of triadic structure.
We further investigate whether motifs occur homogeneously or heterogeneously distributed over a graph. Therefore, we study triadic subgraph structures in each node’s neighborhood individually. In order to quantitatively measure structure from an individual node’s perspective, we introduce an algorithm for node-specific pattern mining for both directed unsigned, and undirected signed networks. Analyzing real-world datasets, we find that there are networks in which motifs are distributed highly heterogeneously, bound to the proximity of only very few nodes. Moreover, we observe indication for the potential sensitivity of biological systems to a targeted removal of these critical vertices. In addition, we study whole graphs with respect to the homogeneity and homophily of their node-specific triadic structure. The former describes the similarity of subgraph distributions in the neighborhoods of individual vertices. The latter quantifies whether connected vertices
are structurally more similar than non-connected ones. We discover these features to be characteristic for the networks’ origins. Moreover, clustering the vertices of graphs regarding their triadic structure, we investigate structural groups in the neural network of C. elegans, the international airport-connection network, and the global network of diplomatic sentiments between countries. For the latter we find evidence for the instability of triangles considered socially unbalanced according to sociological theories.
Finally, we utilize our TRGM to explore ensembles of networks with similar triadic substructure in terms of the evolution of dynamical processes acting on their nodes. Focusing on oscillators, coupled along the graphs’ edges, we observe that certain triad motifs impose a clear signature on the systems’ dynamics, even when embedded in a larger
network structure.
In this thesis, I study entanglement in quantum field theory, using methods from operator algebra theory. More precisely, the thesis covers original research on the entanglement properties of the free fermionic field. After giving a pedagogical introduction to algebraic methods in quantum field theory, as well as the modular theory of Tomita-Takesaki and its relation to entanglement, I present a coherent framework that allows to solve Tomita-Takesaki theory for free fermionic fields in any number of dimensions. Subsequently, I use the derived machinery on the free massless fermion in two dimensions, where the formulae can be evaluated analytically. In particular, this entails the derivation of the resolvent of restrictions of the propagator, by means of solving singular integral equations. In this way, I derive the modular flow, modular Hamiltonian, modular correlation function, R\'enyi entanglement entropy, von-Neumann entanglement entropy, relative entanglement entropy, and mutual information for multi-component regions. All of this is done for the vacuum and thermal states, both on the infinite line and the circle with (anti-)periodic boundary conditions. Some of these results confirm previous results from the literature, such as the modular Hamiltonian and entanglement entropy in the vacuum state. The non-universal solutions for modular flow, modular correlation function, and R\'enyi entropy, however are new, in particular at finite temperature on the circle. Additionally, I show how boundaries of spacetime affect entanglement, as well as how one can define relative (entanglement) entropy and mutual information in theories with superselection rules. The findings regarding modular flow in multi-component regions can be summarised as follows: In the non-degenerate vacuum state, modular flow is multi-local, in the sense that it mixes the field operators along multiple trajectories, with one trajectory per component. This was already known from previous literature but is presented here in a more explicit form. In particular, I present the exact solution for the dynamics of the mixing process. What was not previously known at all, is that the modular flow of the thermal state on the circle is infinitely multi-local even for a connected region, in the sense that it mixes the field along an infinite, discretely distributed set, of trajectories. In the limit of high temperatures, all trajectories but the local one are pushed towards the boundary of the region, where their amplitude is damped exponentially, leaving only the local result. At low temperatures, on the other hand, these trajectories distribute densely in the region to either---for anti-periodic boundary conditions---cancel, or---for periodic boundary conditions---recover the non-local contribution due to the degenerate vacuum state. Proceeding to spacetimes with boundaries, I show explicitly how the presence of a boundary implies entanglement between the two components of the Dirac spinor. By computing the mutual information between the components inside a connected region, I show quantitatively that this entanglement decreases as an inverse square law at large distances from the boundary. In addition, full conformal symmetry (which is explicitly broken due to the presence of a boundary) is recovered from the exact solution for modular flow, far away from the boundary. As far as I know, all of these results are new, although related results were published by another group during the final stage of this thesis. Finally, regarding relative entanglement entropy in theories with superselection sectors, I introduce charge and flux resolved relative entropies, which are novel measures for the distinguishability of states, incorporating a charge operator, central to the algebra of observables. While charge resolved relative entropy has the interpretation of being a ``distinguishability per charge sector'', I argue that it is physically meaningless without placing a cutoff, due to infinite short-distance entanglement. Flux resolved relative entropy, on the other hand, overcomes this problem by inserting an Aharonov-Bohm flux and thus passing to a variant of the grand canonical ensemble. It takes a well defined value, even without putting a cutoff, and I compute its value between various states of the free massless fermion on the line, the charge operator being the total fermion number.
This thesis is dedicated to a theoretical study of the 1-band Hubbard model in the strong coupling limit. The investigation is based on the Dynamical Cluster Approximation (DCA) which systematically restores non-local corrections to the Dynamical Mean Field approximation (DMFA). The DCA is formulated in momentum space and is characterised by a patching of the Brillouin zone where momentum conservation is only recovered between two patches. The approximation works well if k-space correlation functions show a weak momentum dependence. In order to study the temperature and doping dependence of the spin- and charge excitation spectra, we explicitly extend the Dynamical Cluster Approximation to two-particle response functions. The full irreducible two-particle vertex with three momenta and frequencies is approximated by an effective vertex dependent on the momentum and frequency of the spin and/or charge excitations. The effective vertex is calculated by using the Quantum Monte Carlo method on the finite cluster whereas the analytical continuation of dynamical quantities is performed by a stochastic version of the maximum entropy method. A comparison with high temperature auxiliary field quantum Monte Carlo data serves as a benchmark for our approach to two-particle correlation functions. Our method can reproduce basic characteristics of the spin- and charge excitation spectrum. Near and beyond optimal doping, our results provide a consistent overall picture of the interplay between charge, spin and single-particle excitations: a collective spin mode emerges at optimal doping and sufficiently low temperatures in the spin response spectrum and exhibits the energy scale of the magnetic exchange interaction J. Simultaneously, the low energy single-particle excitations are characterised by a coherent quasiparticle with bandwidth J. The origin of the quasiparticle can be quite well understood in a picture of a more or less antiferromagnetic ordered background in which holes are dressed by spin-excitations to allow for a coherent motion. By increasing doping, all features which are linked to the spin-polaron vanish in the single-particle as well as two-particle spin response spectrum. In the second part of the thesis an analysis of superconductivity in the Hubbard model is presented. The superconducting instability is implemented within the Dynamical Cluster Approximation by essentially allowing U(1) symmetry breaking baths in the QMC calculations for the cluster. The superconducting transition temperature T_c is derived from the d-wave order parameter which is directly estimated on the Monte Carlo cluster. The critical temperature T_c is in astonishing agreement with the temperature scale estimated by the divergence of the pair-field susceptibility in the paramagnetic phase. A detailed study of the pseudo and superconducting gap is continued by the investigation of the local and angle-resolved spectral function.
In this thesis, a phenomenological phase-fluctuation model for the pseudogap regime of the underdoped cuprates was discussed. The key idea of the phase-fluctuation scenario in the high-T_c superconductors is the notion that the pseudogap observed in a wide variety of experiments arises from phase fluctuations of the superconducting gap. In this scenario, below a mean-field temperature scale T_c^{MF}, a d_{x^2-y^2}-wave gap amplitude is assumed to develop. However, the superconducting transition is suppressed to a considerably lower transition temperature T_c by phase fluctuations. In the intermediate temperature regime between T_c^{MF} and T_c, phase fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter give rise to the pseudogap phenomena. The phenomenological phase-fluctuation model discussed in this thesis consists of a two-dimensional BCS-like Hamiltonian where the phase of the pairing-amplitude is free to fluctuate. The fluctuations of the phase were treated by a Monte Carlo simulation of a classical XY model. First, the density of states was calculated. The quasiparticle tunneling conductance (dI/dV) obtained from our phenomenological phase fluctuation model was able to reproduce characteristic and salient features of recent scanning-tunneling studies of Bi2212 and Bi2201 suggesting that the pseudogap behavior observed in these experiments arises from phase fluctuations of the d_{x^2-y^2}-wave pairing gap. In calculating the single-particle spectral weight, we were further able to show how phase fluctuations influence the experimentally observed quasiparticle spectra in detail. In particular the disappearance of the BCS-Bogoliubov quasiparticle band at T_c and the change from a more V-like superconducting gap to a rather U-like pseudogap above T_c can be explained in a consistent way by assuming that the low-energy pseudogap in the underdoped cuprates is due to phase fluctuations of a local d_{x^2-y^2}-wave pairing gap with fixed magnitude. Furthermore, phase fluctuations can explain why the pseudogap starts closing from the nodal points, whereas it rather fills in along the anti-nodal directions and they can also account for the characteristic temperature dependence of the superconducting (pi,0)-photoemission-peak. Next, we have shown that the "violation" of the low-frequency optical sum rule recently observed in the SC state of underdoped Bi2212, which is associated with a reduction of kinetic energy, can be related to the role of phase fluctuations. The decrease in kinetic energy is due to the sharpening of the quasiparticle peaks close to the superconducting transition at T_c == T_{KT}, where the phase correlation length xi diverges. A detailed analysis of the temperature and frequency dependence of the optical conductivity sigma(omega)=sigma_1(omega)+i sigma_2(omega) revealed a superconducting scaling of sigma_2(omega), which starts already above T_c, exactly as observed in high-frequency microwave conductivity experiments on Bi2212. On the other hand, our model was only able to account for the characteristic peak, which is observed in sigma_1(omega) close to the superconducting transition, after the inclusion of an additional marginal-Fermi-liquid scattering-rate in the optical conductivity formula. Finally, we calculated the static uniform diamagnetic susceptibility. It turned out that the precursor effects of the fluctuating diamagnetism above T_c are very small and limited to temperatures close to T_c in a phase-fluctuation scenario of the pseudogap. Instead, the temperature dependence of the uniform static magnetic susceptibility is dominated by the Pauli spin susceptibility, which displayed a very characteristic temperature dependence, independent of the details of the gap function used in our model. This temperature dependence is qualitatively very similar to the experimentally observed change of the Knight-shift as a function of temperature in underdoped Bi2212.
We consider the prospects for a neutrino factory measuring mixing angles, the CP violating phase and mass-squared differences by detecting wrong-charge muons arising from the chain $\mu^+\to\nu_e\to\nu_\mu\to\mu^-$ and the right-charge muons coming from the chain $\mu^+\to\bar{\nu}_\mu\to\bar{\nu}_\mu\to\mu^+$ (similar to $\mu^-$ chains), where $\nu_e\to\nu_\mu$ and $\bar{\nu}_\mu\to\bar{\nu}_\mu$ are neutrino oscillation channels through a long baseline. First, we study physics with near detectors and consider the treatment of systematic errors including cross section errors, flux errors, and background uncertainties. We illustrate for which measurements near detectors are required, discuss how many are needed, and what the role of the flux monitoring is. We demonstrate that near detectors are mandatory for the leading atmospheric parameter measurements if the neutrino factory has only one baseline, whereas systematic errors partially cancel if the neutrino factory complex includes the magic baseline. Second, we perform the baseline and energy optimization of the neutrino factory including the latest simulation results from the magnetized iron neutrino detector (MIND). We also consider the impact of $\tau$ decays, generated by appearance channels $\nu_\mu \rightarrow \nu_\tau$ and $\nu_e \rightarrow \nu_\tau$, on the discovery reaches of the mass orderings, the leptonic CP violation, and the non-zero $\theta_{13}$, which we find to be negligible for the considered detector. Third, we make a comparison of a high energy neutrino factory to a low energy neutrino factory and find that they are just two versions of the same experiment optimized for different regions of the parameter space. In addition, we briefly comment on whether it is useful to build the bi-magic baseline at the low energy neutrino factory. Finally, the effects of one additional massive sterile neutrino are discussed in the context of a combined short and long baseline setup. It is found that near detectors can provide the required sensitivity at the LSND-motivated $\Delta m_{41}^2$-range, while some sensitivity can also be obtained in the region of the atmospheric mass splitting introduced by the sterile neutrino from the long baselines.
The mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking is essential to provide masses to the W and Z gauge bosons and fermions of the SM. We hope to elucidate this mechanism at the next generation of colliders. While the SM has been tested with astonishing precision it is believed to be an effective theory of a more fundamental Great Unified Theory. SUSY is one of the most attractive extensions of the SM of particle physics. Therefore, the search for SUSY is a top priority at the next generation of colliders. Once Higgs bosons are discovered, a precise determination of their properties is necessary to differentiate between different models, in particular the MSSM. A muon collider, running at center of mass energies around the neutral Higgs boson resonances, would allow precise measurements of masses and widths, as well as the couplings to their decay products. In particular their couplings to supersymmetric particles are essential to probe SUSY. Therefore, we study the decays of the heavier CP-even and CP-odd Higgs bosons into lighter chargino or neutralino pairs. In this thesis we have analyzed the polarization effects of the beams and the charginos and neutralinos produced in mu+ mu- annihilation around the center of mass energies of the Higgs boson resonances H and A. For the production of equal charginos we have shown that the ratio of H-chargino and A-chargino couplings can be precisely determined independently of the chargino decay mechanism. This method avoids reference to other experiments and makes only a few model-dependent assumptions. Here we have analyzed the effect of the energy spread and of the error from the non-resonant channels, including an irreducible standard model background contribution. For small tan(beta) the process yields large cross sections of up to a pb. For the production of two different charginos we have shown that the H-A interference can be analyzed using asymmetries of the charge conjugated processes. The asymmetries depend on the muon longitudinal beam polarizations and vanish for unpolarized beams. For the chargino pair production with subsequent two-body decay of one of the charginos we have shown that charge and beam polarization asymmetries in the energy distributions of the decay particles are sensitive to the interference of scalar exchange channels with different CP quantum numbers. This process provides unique information on the interference of overlapping Higgs boson resonances. The effect is larger for regions of parameter space with intermediate values of tan(beta) and light sleptons or LSP neutralinos. For the chargino pair production with subsequent two-body decays of both charginos we have defined energy distribution and angular asymmetries in the final particles, in order to analyze the spin-spin correlations of the charginos. The transverse polarizations of the charginos are sensitive to the CP quantum number of the exchanged Higgs bosons and can thus be used to separate overlapping resonances, as well as to determine the CP quantum number of a single resonance. For equal charginos, these asymmetries are not sensitive to the interference of CP-even and CP-odd Higgs exchange channels. For the neutralino pair production in mu+ mu- annihilation we study similar processes as for chargino production. Line shape measurements of neutralino pair production allow to precisely determine the ratio of H-neutralino and A-neutralino couplings. Neutralino pair production with subsequent two-body decay of one of the neutralinos in the intermediate tan(beta) region is sensitive to the interference of H and A and may be measured with a large statistical significance. The Majorana nature of the neutralinos implies that the beam polarization asymmetries vanish for the remaining production channels. For neutralino pair production with subsequent two-body decays of both neutralinos we analyze similar observables as in chargino production. The main difference consists in the intrinsic relative CP quantum number of the neutralino pair, which depends on the chosen scenario. We have thus shown that the interaction of the Higgs bosons to the gaugino-higgsino sector can be probed at a muon collider in chargino and neutralino pair production, both analyzing the production line-shape around the resonances as well as studying the chargino and neutralino polarizations via their decays.
In this thesis we examine the vector boson scattering (VBS) process \(\mathrm p \mathrm p \to \mathrm e^+ \nu_\mathrm e\mu^-\bar\nu_\mu\mathrm j\mathrm j +X\) (short: \(\mathrm W^+\mathrm W^-\) scattering) at NLO accuracy in two experimental setups by performing a Monte Carlo analysis of a \(13\,\mathrm{TeV}\) LHC run. \(\mathrm W^+\mathrm W^-\) scattering shows similarities and differences compared to the scattering of other vector bosons. We present a detailed description of the types of appearing subprocesses and background processes. We give insight into our code which solves the problems we are faced within \(\mathrm W^+\mathrm W^-\) scattering. This is especially the presence of the Higgs-boson resonance in the fiducial phase-space region. Particular attention is dedicated to the permutation of resonances. The integrated signal cross section at LO \(\mathcal O(\alpha^6)\) amounts to \(2.6988(3)\,\mathrm{fb}\) and \(1.5322(2)\,\mathrm{fb}\), respectively, in the two experimental setups. The LO QCD-induced background of \(\mathcal O(\alpha_\mathrm s^2\alpha^4)\) amounts to \(6.9115(9)\,\mathrm{fb}\) and \(1.6923(3)\,\mathrm{fb}\). The EW corrections to the signal are \(-11.4\%\) and \(-6.7\%\), the QCD corrections amount to \(-5.2\%\) and \(-23.0\%\). The EW corrections to the background are \(-8.3\%\) and \(-5.3\%\), the QCD corrections amount to \(-30.3\%\) and \(-77.6\%\). Our results for the QCD corrections and the QCD-induced background include a large uncertainty from varying the renormalisation and factorisation scale, and we discuss improvements for future calculations. We show the differential cross sections with unique features of \(\mathrm W^+\mathrm W^-\) scattering compared to other VBS processes and investigate in particular the subprocess of Higgs-boson production by using a modified version of our setups.
This thesis is dedicated to construct a non-abelian holographic dynamical minimal composite Higgs model. We first build a non-abelian bottom-up AdS/YM model that can explain the QCD meson spectrum well. The model is made non-abelian by considering non-abelian DBI action in the top-down model. We then change the dual theory from the QCD to the minimal composite Higgs model U (4)/Sp(4). By adding a second explicit U (4) → Sp(4) breaking through the NJL interaction at the boundary, we managed to construct a composite Higgs phase and a technicolor phase in this model. The transition between the two phases is also realized, which is controlled by the NJL coupling. This thesis is based on the works [1, 2].
Supersymmetry is currently the best motivated extension of the Standard Model and will be subject to extensive studies in the upcoming generation of colliders. The e-e- mode would be a straight forward extension to the currently planed International Linear Collider, planned to operate in e+e- mode. The low background in this mode may prove advantageous in the study of CP- and Lepton Flavour Violtation. In this work a CP sensitive observable based on transverse beam polarisation is introduced and the impact of neutralino mixing on the total cross section in cas of non-vanishing CP-violtating phases is studied in representative scenarios including non-GUT scenarios. Additionally, the mixing of sleptons is studied in the context of LFV, an analytical approximation is developed, and possible background free measurements of these effects are investigated.
Wir studieren die Produktion und den Nachweis von Selektronen mit Massen jenseits der Schwelle zur Paarerzeugung an künftigen Linearbeschleunigern mit Schwerpunktsenergien von 500 GeV und 800 GeV. Hierzu betrachten wir die Produktion von linken und rechten Selektronen in Assoziation mit dem jeweils leichtesten Neutralino oder Chargino durch Elektron-Elektron-, Elektron-Positron- und Elektron-Photon-Streuung im Rahmen des MSSM. Die Produktion durch Elektron-Elektron-Streuung untersuchen wir zusätzlich in zwei erweiterten Modellen, dem NMSSM und einem E6-Modell mit einem zusätzlichen U(1)-Eichfaktor.
Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit ist eine umfassende Analyse von Erzeugung und anschließenden Zerfällen von Neutralinos im Nichtminimalen Supersymmetrischen Standardmodell (NMSSM) speziell für den nächsten verfügbaren Elektron-Positron-Speicherring LEP2 am CERN mit einer voraussichtlichen Schwerpunktsenergie von 190 GeV. Das NMSSM ist die einfachste Erweiterung des Minimalen Supersymmetrischen Standardmodells MSSM mit einem Singlett-Superfeld, so dass der Higgs-Sektor insgesamt sieben physikalische Higgs-Teilchen enthält, und zwar drei neutrale skalare, zwei pseudoskalare und zwei geladene. Weiterhin enthält das NMSSM fünf Neutralinos gegenüber vier im MSSM. In dieser Arbeit präsentieren wir die 5 x 5 Neutralinomischungsmatrix, stellen die Eigenwertgleichung auf und analysieren das Massenspektrum und die Parameterabhängigkeit möglicher masseloser Zustände. Für die Untersuchung von Neutralinoproduktion und -zerfall wurden verschiedene Szenarien gewählt, in denen das leichteste Neutralino eine Masse von 10 GeV und eine Singlettkomponente von über 90% besitzt oder in denen das leichteste Neutralino bis zu 50 Gev schwer ist und sich der Singlettanteil auf die beiden leichtesten Neutralinos verteilt. Die Wirkungsquerschnitte für die Neutralinoproduktion wurden in den gewählten Szenarien für Schwerpunktsenergien von 100 GeV bis 600 GeV berechnet, also bis zu einem Bereich, den ein geplanter Elektron-Positron-Linearbeschleuniger erreichen kann. Typische Wirkungsquerschnitte für die direkte Produktion vorwiegend singlettartiger Neutralinos liegen im Bereich von 100 fb. Selbst wenn das leichteste Neutralino sehr leicht ist, kann das nächste bereits so schwer sein, dass bei LEP2 nur die nicht nachtweisbare Paarproduktion des leichtesten supersymmetrischen Teilchens möglich ist. Somit ist bei LEP2 keine Erhöhung der unteren Neutralinomassengrenzen im NMSSM zu erwarten, falls kein Neutralino gefunden wird. In Szenarien mit leichten singlettartigen Neutralinos können sehr oft auch sehr leichte Higgs-Bosonen mit Massen unterhalb der im MSSM vorhandenen Grenzen existieren. Somit kann in allen unseren Szenarien der Neutralinozerfall in ein skalares oder pseudoskalares Higgs-Boson möglich sein und dann Verweigungsverhältnisse bis zu fast 100% erreichen. Wir berechnen in dieser Arbeit für die bei LEP2 produzierbaren Neutralinos die Verwzeigungsverhältnisse für die Zweikörperzerfälle in Higgs-Bosonen, die Dreikörperzerfälle in zwei Fermionen und den Schleifenzerfall in ein Photon. In allen Fällen befindet sich im Endzustand außerdem das unsichtbare leichteste Neutralino, dass sich experimentell als fehlende Energie niederschlägt. Zur Bestimmung der Signaturen betrachten wir außerdem die anschließenden Zerfallsmodi der leichten Higgs-Bosonen. Der Nachweis von leichten singlettartigen Neutralinos im NMSSM kann einerseits unmöglich sein, wenn entweder die schweren Neutralinos bei der verfügbaren Schwerpunktsenergie nicht produziert werden können oder über Higgs-Bosonen vollkommen in das LSP zerfallen, andererseits aber auch durch klare Signaturen mit einem Photon oder mit Jets im Endzustand erleichtert werden. Bei LEP2 sollten also durchaus Chancen bestehen, auch im Rahmen des NMSSM ein Neutralino zu entdecken. Zumindest werden sich weitere Einschränkungen des Parameterraums ergeben. Der Dissertation ist ein Anhang beigefügt, der eine vollständige Liste aller Feynman-Regeln des NMSSM enthält, die sich von denjenigen des MSSM unterscheiden.
At a hadron collider as the LHC or the Tevatron the production of a photon in association with a leptonically decaying vector boson represents an important class of processes. These processes stand out due to a very clean signal of a photon and two leptons. Furthermore they
provide direct access to the photon–vector-boson couplings and thus an easy opportunity to test the
gauge sector of the Standard Model. Within the scope of this work we present a full calculation of the next-to-leading-order corrections which include the O (αs) corrections of the strong interaction as well as the electroweak corrections of O (α) including all photon-induced contributions. For the creation of matrix elements we use methods based on Feynman diagrams. The IR singularities are treated with the dipole subtraction technique. In order to separate photons from jets, a quark-to-photon fragmentation function ´a la Glover / Morgan or Frixione’s cone isolation is employed. Moreover, two different scenarios for charged leptons in the fi state were considered. The fi scenario for dressed leptons assumes that a charged lepton and a photon will be recombined if they are collinear. In the second scenario for bare muons it is assumed that leptons and photon can be separated in a detector also if they are collinear.
For our calculation we implemented all corrections into a fl Monte Carlo program. Be- sides the computation of the total cross section this program is also able to generate diff tial distributions of several experimentally motivated observables. Apart from the expected large electroweak corrections in the high transverse-momentum regions and sizeable corrections in the resonance regions of the transverse or the invariant masses we found photon-induced corrections up to several 10% for high transverse momenta. Within run I at the LHC for 7/8 TeV the experimental accuracy for Vγ production was roughly 10%. Due to the higher luminosity at run II this accuracy
will be reduced to the level of a few percent so that corrections of the same order within the theoretical predictions might become relevant. In this work we present results for the total cross section at the LHC for 7, 8 and 14 TeV and the corresponding distributions
for 14 TeV.
This thesis studies connections between quantum information measures and geometric features of spacetimes within the AdS/CFT correspondence. These studies are motivated by the idea that spacetime can be thought of as an effect emerging from an underlying entanglement structure in the AdS/CFT correspondence. In particular, I study generalized entanglement measures in two-dimensional conformal field theories and their holographic duals. Unlike the ordinary entanglement entropy of a spatial subregion typically used in the AdS/CFT context, the generalization considered here measures correlations between different fields as well as between spatial degrees of freedom. I present a new gauge invariant definition of the generalized entanglement entropy applicable to both mixed and pure states as well as explicit results for thermal states of the S_N-orbifold theory of the D1/D5 system. Along the way, I develop computation techniques for conformal blocks on the torus and apply them to the calculation of the ordinary entanglement entropy for large central charge CFTs at finite size and finite temperature. The generalized Ryu-Takayanagi formula arising from these studies provides further support for the idea that entanglement and geometry are intrinsically linked in AdS/CFT. The results show that the holographic dual to the generalized entanglement entropy given by the length of a geodesic winding around black hole horizons or naked singularities probes subregions of spacetime that are inaccessible to Ryu-Takayanagi surfaces, thereby solving the puzzle of how these features of the spacetime are encoded in the boundary theory. Furthermore, I investigate quantum circuits embedded in two-dimensional conformal field theories as well as computational complexity measures therein. These investigations are motivated by conjectures relating computational complexity in conformal field theories to geometric features of black hole geometries. In this thesis, I study quantum circuits built up from conformal transformations. I investigate examples of computational complexity measures in these circuits related to geometric actions on coadjoint orbits of the Virasoro group and to the Fubini-Study metric. I then work out relations between these computational complexity measures and the dual gravitational theory. Moreover, I construct a bulk dual to the circuits in consideration and use this construction to study geometric realizations of computational complexity measures from first principles. The results of this part on the one hand rule out some possibilities for dual realizations of computational complexity in two-dimensional CFTs put forward in previous work while on the other hand providing a new robust dual realization of a computational complexity measure based on the Fubini-Study distance.