S. Ward
University of Bristol
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Featured researches published by S. Ward.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2013
S. Ward; Pierre Bouillot; Hanjo Ryll; Klaus Kiefer; Karl Krämer; Christian Rüegg; Corinna Kollath; Thierry Giamarchi
Magnetic insulators have proven to be usable as quantum simulators for itinerant interacting quantum systems. In particular the compound (C(5)H(12)N)(2)CuBr(4) (for short: (Hpip)(2)CuBr(4)) was shown to be a remarkable realization of a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) and allowed us to quantitatively test the TLL theory. Substitution weakly disorders this class of compounds and thus allows us to use them to tackle questions pertaining to the effect of disorder in TLL as well, such as that of the formation of the Bose glass. In this paper we present, as a first step in this direction, a study of the properties of the related (Hpip)(2)CuCl(4) compound. We determine the exchange couplings and compute the temperature and magnetic field dependence of the specific heat, using a finite temperature density matrix renormalization group procedure. Comparison with the measured specific heat at zero magnetic field confirms the exchange parameters and Hamiltonian for the (Hpip)(2)CuCl(4) compound, giving the basis needed to begin studying the disorder effects.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
S. Ward; Mena M; Pierre Bouillot; Corinna Kollath; Thierry Giamarchi; Kai Phillip Schmidt; B. Normand; Karl Krämer; Daniel Biner; R. I. Bewley; T. Guidi; Martin Boehm; D. F. McMorrow; Christian Rüegg
The challenge of one-dimensional systems is to understand their physics beyond the level of known elementary excitations. By high-resolution neutron spectroscopy in a quantum spin-ladder material, we probe the leading multiparticle excitation by characterizing the two-magnon bound state at zero field. By applying high magnetic fields, we create and select the singlet (longitudinal) and triplet (transverse) excitations of the fully spin-polarized ladder, which have not been observed previously and are close analogs of the modes anticipated in a polarized Haldane chain. Theoretical modeling of the dynamical response demonstrates our complete quantitative understanding of these states.
Physical Review B | 2014
Hanjo Ryll; Klaus Kiefer; Christian Rüegg; S. Ward; Karl Krämer; Daniel Biner; Pierre Bouillot; Emanuele Coira; Thierry Giamarchi; Corinna Kollath