We investigate the low-temperature properties of the quantum Heisenberg models, both ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic, in one and two dimensions. We study two diferent large-N formulations, using Schwinger bosons and S = 2 fermions, and solve for their low-order thermodynamic properties. Comparison with exact solutions in one dimension demonstrates the applicability of this expansion to the physical models at N =2. For the square lattice, we find at the mean-field level a low-temperature correlation length which behaves as (cc exp(A /T}, where A asymptotically approaches 2~S for large spin S, but As i/z-1. 16 and As &-5.46. We mention the relevance of our results to recent experiments in La2Cu04.
Graphene subject to a spatially uniform, circularly-polarized electric field supports a Floquet spectrum with properties akin to those of a topological insulator, including non-vanishing Chern numbers associated with bulk bands and current-carrying edge states. Transport properties of this system however are complicated by the non-equilibrium occupations of the Floquet states. We address this by considering transport in a two-terminal ribbon geometry for which the leads have well-defined chemical potentials, with an irradiated central scattering region. We demonstrate the presence of edge states, which for infinite mass boundary conditions may be associated with only one of the two valleys. At low frequencies, the bulk DC conductivity near zero energy is shown to be dominated by a series of states with very narrow anticrossings, leading to super-diffusive behavior. For very long ribbons, a ballistic regime emerges in which edge state transport dominates.
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