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Wednesday, March 28, 2007
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Seminar

Non-Hermitian Luttinger Liquids and Vortex Physics

David Nelson
Lyman Laboratory of Physics, Harvard University

This is the second talk in the CNLS 2007 Kac Lecture Series

As a model of two thermally excited flux liquids connected by a weak link, we describe the effect of a single line defect on vortex filaments oriented parallel to the surface of a thin planar superconductor. When the applied field is tilted relative to the line defect, the physics is described by a nonhermitian Luttinger liquid of interacting quantum bosons in one spatial dimension with a point defect. We find a delicate interplay between enhancement of pinning due to Luttinger liquid effects and depinning due to the tilted magnetic field. Interactions dramatically improve the ability of a single columnar pin to suppress vortex tilt when the Luttinger liquid parameter g is less than or equal to one. Exact results are also possible via a free fermion mapping for flux lines interacting with many columnar pins for the special case g = 1. Results inspired by magnetic force microscope experiments which tear away a flux line from various pinning structures will also be presented.

Host: Bob Ecke, CNLS