1,128 research outputs found
New Enhanced Tunneling in Nuclear Processes
The small sub-barrier tunneling probability of nuclear processes can be
dramatically enhanced by collision with incident charged particles.
Semiclassical methods of theory of complex trajectories have been applied to
nuclear tunneling, and conditions for the effects have been obtained. We
demonstrate the enhancement of alpha particle decay by incident proton with
energy of about 0.25 MeV. We show that the general features of this process are
common for other sub-barrier nuclear processes and can be applied to nuclear
fission.Comment: RevTex4, 2 figure
The bifurcation phenomena in the resistive state of the narrow superconducting channels
We have investigated the properties of the resistive state of the narrow
superconducting channel of the length L/\xi=10.88 on the basis of the
time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau model. We have demonstrated that the bifurcation
points of the time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equations cause a number of
singularities of the current-voltage characteristic of the channel. We have
analytically estimated the averaged voltage and the period of the oscillating
solution for the relatively small currents. We have also found the range of
currents where the system possesses the chaotic behavior
Two-dimensional tunneling in a SQUID
Traditionally quantum tunneling in a static SQUID is studied on the basis of
a classical trajectory in imaginary time under a two-dimensional potential
barrier. The trajectory connects a potential well and an outer region crossing
their borders in perpendicular directions. In contrast to that main-path
mechanism, a wide set of trajectories with components tangent to the border of
the well can constitute an alternative mechanism of multi-path tunneling. The
phenomenon is essentially non-one-dimensional. Continuously distributed paths
under the barrier result in enhancement of tunneling probability. A type of
tunneling mechanism (main-path or multi-path) depends on character of a state
in the potential well prior to tunneling.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Vortex liquid crystals in anisotropic type II superconductors
In a type II superconductor in a moderate magnetic field, the superconductor
to normal state transition may be described as a phase transition in which the
vortex lattice melts into a liquid. In a biaxial superconductor, or even a
uniaxial superconductor with magnetic field oriented perpendicular to the
symmetry axis, the vortices acquire elongated cross sections and interactions.
Systems of anisotropic, interacting constituents generally exhibit liquid
crystalline phases. We examine the possibility of a two step melting in
homogeneous type II superconductors with anisotropic superfluid stiffness from
a vortex lattice into first a vortex smectic and then a vortex nematic at high
temperature and magnetic field. We find that fluctuations of the ordered phase
favor an instability to an intermediate smectic-A in the absence of intrinsic
pinning
Anisotropic shear melting and recrystallization of a two-dimensional complex (dusty) plasma
A two-dimensional plasma crystal was melted by suddenly applying localized
shear stress. A stripe of particles in the crystal was pushed by the radiation
pressure force of a laser beam. We found that the response of the plasma
crystal to stress and the eventual shear melting depended strongly on the
crystal's angular orientation relative to the laser beam. Shear stress and
strain rate were measured, from which the spatially resolved shear viscosity
was calculated. The latter was shown to have minima in the regions with high
velocity shear, thus demonstrating shear thinning. Shear-induced reordering was
observed in the steady-state flow, where particles formed strings aligned in
the flow direction.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Physical Review
- …