972 research outputs found
Electrical conductivity cell and method for fabricating the same
A flask having a threaded neck and a cap adapted for threaded engagement on the neck are used. A laminated disc between the cap and the neck forms a gas tight seal and the cap has a central opening that exposes a medial region of the disc. Piercing the disc through the opening are two electrodes, the inner ends of which contact the sample within the flask and the outer ends of which can be connected to test equipment. Cylindric glass tubes are fitted over the external portion of the electrodes to provide physical support and silicone rubber or a similar material serves to retain the glass cylinders in place and form a gas tight seal between the cylinders and the electrodes. Shrinkable tubing is shrunk over the glass tubes to afford further mechanical support and sealing. A final relatively large diameter shrinkable tube is shrunk over both electrodes and their associated glass cylinders. The support and sealing means for the electrodes is confined to a limited portion of the medial region of the disc so that the remainder of such region can be punctured by a hollow needle to introduce a test sample within the flask
Lorentz TEM imaging of stripe structures embedded in a soft magnetic matrix
N\'eel walls in soft magnetic NiFe/NiFeGa hybrid stripe structures surrounded
by a NiFe film are investigated by high resolution Lorentz transmission
electron microscopic imaging. An anti-parallel orientation of magnetization in
1000 nm wide neighboring unirradiated-irradiated stripes is observed by forming
high angle domain walls during magnetization reversal. Upon downscaling the
stripe structure size from 1000 nm to 200 nm a transition from a discrete
domain pattern to an effective magnetic medium is observed for external
magnetic field reversal. This transition is associated with vanishing ability
of hosting high angle domain walls between adjacent stripes. The investigation
also demonstrated the potentiality of Lorentz microscopy to image periodic
stripe structures well under micron length-scale.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
MnSi nanoparticles embedded in Si: Superparamagnetism with a collective behavior
The doping of Mn in Si is attracting research attentions due to the
possibility to fabricate Si-based diluted magnetic semiconductors. However, the
low solubility of Mn in Si favors the precipitation of Mn ions even at
non-equilibrium growth conditions. MnSi nanoparticles are the common
precipitates, which show exotic magnetic properties in comparison with the
MnSi bulk phase. In this paper we present the static and dynamic
magnetic properties of MnSi nanoparticles. Using the Preisach model, we
derive the magnetic parameters, such as the magnetization of individual
particles, the distribution of coercive fields and the inter-particle
interaction field. Time-dependent magnetization measurements reveal a
spin-glass behavior of the system.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
Origin of magnetic moments in defective TiO2 single crystals
In this paper we show that ferromagnetism can be induced in pure TiO2 single
crystals by oxygen ion irradiation. By combining x-ray diffraction,
Raman-scattering, and electron spin resonance spectroscopy, a defect complex,
\emph{i.e.} Ti ions on the substitutional sites accompanied by oxygen
vacancies, has been identified in irradiated TiO2. This kind of defect complex
results in a local (TiO) stretching Raman mode. We elucidate that
Ti ions with one unpaired 3d electron provide the local magnetic
moments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published at Phys. Rev.
A study on the multicolour evolution of Red Sequence galaxy populations: insights from hydrodynamical simulations and semi-analytical models
By means of our own cosmological-hydrodynamical simulation and
semi-analytical model we studied galaxy population properties in clusters and
groups, spanning over 10 different bands from UV to NIR, and their evolution
since redshift z=2. We compare our results in terms of galaxy red/blue
fractions and luminous-to-faint ratio (LFR) on the Red Sequence (RS) with
recent observational data reaching beyond z=1.5. Different selection criteria
were tested in order to retrieve galaxies belonging to the RS: either by their
quiescence degree measured from their specific SFR ("Dead Sequence"), or by
their position in a colour-colour plane which is also a function of sSFR. In
both cases, the colour cut and the limiting magnitude threshold were let
evolving with redshift, in order to follow the natural shift of the
characteristic luminosity in the LF.
We find that the Butcher-Oemler effect is wavelength-dependent, with the
fraction of blue galaxies increasing steeper in optical colours than in NIR.
Besides, only when applying a lower limit in terms of fixed absolute magnitude,
a steep BO effect can be reproduced, while the blue fraction results less
evolving when selecting samples by stellar mass or an evolving magnitude limit.
We then find that also the RS-LFR behaviour, highly debated in the literature,
is strongly dependent on the galaxy selection function: in particular its very
mild evolution recovered when measured in terms of stellar mass, is in
agreement with values reported for some of the highest redshift confirmed
(proto)clusters. As to differences through environments, we find that normal
groups and (to a lesser extent) cluster outskirts present the highest values of
both star forming fraction and LFR at low z, while fossil groups and cluster
cores the lowest: this separation among groups begins after z~0.5, while
earlier all group star forming properties are undistinguishable.Comment: revised version, A&A accepted (11 pages, 6 figures
Probing the interface magnetism in the FeMn/NiFe exchange bias system using magnetic second harmonic generation
Second harmonic generation magneto-optic Kerr effect (SHMOKE) experiments,
sensitive to buried interfaces, were performed on a polycrystalline NiFe/FeMn
bilayer in which areas with different exchange bias fields were prepared using
5 KeV He ion irradiation. Both reversible and irreversible uncompensated spins
are found in the antiferromagnetic layer close to the interface with the
ferromagnetic layer. The SHMOKE hysteresis loop shows the same exchange bias
field as obtained from standard magnetometry. We demonstrate that the exchange
bias effect is controlled by pinned uncompensated spins in the
antiferromagnetic layer.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
XMMU J100750.5+125818: A strong lensing cluster at z=1.082
We report on the discovery of the X-ray luminous cluster XMMU
J100750.5+125818 at redshift 1.082 based on 19 spectroscopic members, which
displays several strong lensing features. SED modeling of the lensed arc
features from multicolor imaging with the VLT and the LBT reveals likely
redshifts ~2.7 for the most prominent of the lensed background galaxies. Mass
estimates are derived for different radii from the velocity dispersion of the
cluster members, M_200 ~ 1.8 10^{14} Msun, from the X-ray spectral parameters,
M_500 ~ 1.0 10^{14} Msun, and the largest lensing arc, M_SL ~ 2.3 10^{13} Msun.
The projected spatial distribution of cluster galaxies appears to be elongated,
and the brightest galaxy lies off center with respect to the X-ray emission
indicating a not yet relaxed structure. XMMU J100750.5+125818 offers excellent
diagnostics of the inner mass distribution of a distant cluster with a
combination of strong and weak lensing, optical and X-ray spectroscopy.Comment: A&A, accepted for publicatio
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