917 research outputs found
ESR modes in a Strong-Leg Ladder in the Tomonaga-Luttinger Liquid Phase
Magnetic excitations in the strong-leg quantum spin ladder compound
(CHN)CuBr (known as DIMPY) in the field-induced
Tomonaga-Luttinger spin liquid phase are studied by means of high-field
electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The presence of a gapped ESR mode
with unusual non-linear frequency-field dependence is revealed experimentally.
Using a combination of analytic and exact diagonalization methods, we compute
the dynamical structure factor and identify this mode with longitudinal
excitations in the antisymmetric channel. We argue that these excitations
constitute a fingerprint of the spin dynamics in a strong-leg spin-1/2
Heisenberg antiferromagnetic ladder and owe its ESR observability to the
uniform Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction
Field-Induced Gap in a Quantum Spin-1/2 Chain in a Strong Magnetic Field
Magnetic excitations in copper pyrimidine dinitrate, a spin-1/2
antiferromagnetic chain with alternating -tensor and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interactions that exhibits a field-induced spin gap, are probed by means of
pulsed-field electron spin resonance spectroscopy. In particular, we report on
a minimum of the gap in the vicinity of the saturation field T
associated with a transition from the sine-Gordon region (with soliton-breather
elementary excitations) to a spin-polarized state (with magnon excitations).
This interpretation is fully confirmed by the quantitative agreement over the
entire field range of the experimental data with the DMRG investigation of the
spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain with a staggered transverse field
Spin Dynamics in Chains with Next-Nearest-Neighbor Exchange Interactions
Low-energy magnetic excitations in the spin-1/2 chain compound
(CHN)CuCl [known as (6MAP)CuCl] are probed by means of
tunable-frequency electron spin resonance. Two modes with asymmetric (with
respect to the line) frequency-field dependences are resolved,
illuminating the striking incompatibility with a simple uniform
Heisenberg chain model. The unusual ESR spectrum is explained in terms of the
recently developed theory for spin-1/2 chains, suggesting the important role of
next-nearest-neighbor interactions in this compound. Our conclusion is
supported by model calculations for the magnetic susceptibility of
(6MAP)CuCl, revealing a good qualitative agreement with experiment
Establishing the fundamental magnetic interactions in the chiral skyrmionic Mott insulator Cu2OSeO3 by terahertz electron spin resonance
The recent discovery of skyrmions in CuOSeO has established a new
platform to create and manipulate skyrmionic spin textures. We use high-field
electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy combining a terahertz free electron
laser and pulsed magnetic fields up to 64 T to probe and quantify its
microscopic spin-spin interactions. Besides providing direct access to the
long-wavelength Goldstone mode, this technique probes also the high-energy part
of the excitation spectrum which is inaccessible by standard low-frequency ESR.
Fitting the behavior of the observed modes in magnetic field to a theoretical
framework establishes experimentally that the fundamental magnetic building
blocks of this skyrmionic magnet are rigid, highly entangled and weakly coupled
tetrahedra.Comment: 5 pages, 3 Figure
Distribution and prevalence of the myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae in northernmost Europe: analysis of three salmonid species
Global climate change is altering the abundance and spread of many aquatic parasites and pathogens. Proliferative kidney disease (PKD) of salmonids caused by the myxozoan Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae is one such emerging disorder, and its impact is expected to increase with rising water temperature. Yet, the distribution and prevalence of T. bryosalmonae in Northern Europe remain poorly characterized. Here, we studied 43 locations in 27 rivers in northernmost Norway and Finland to describe T. bryosalmonae infection frequency and patterns in 1389 juvenile salmonids. T. bryosalmonae was discovered in 12 out of 27 rivers (44%) and prevalence ranged from 4.2 to 55.5% in Atlantic salmon and from 5.8 to 75% in brown trout among infected rivers. In sympatric populations, brown trout was more frequently infected with T. bryosalmonae than was salmon. Age-specific parasite prevalence patterns revealed that in contrast to lower latitudes, the infection of juvenile fish predominantly occurs during the second summer or later. Temperature monitoring over 2 yr indicated that the mean water temperature in June was 2.1 to 3.2 degrees C higher in rivers containing T. bryosalmonae compared to parasite-free rivers, confirming the important role of temperature in parasite occurrence. Temporal comparison in T. bryosalmonae prevalence over a 10 yr period in 11 rivers did not reveal any signs of contemporary parasite spread to previously uninfected rivers. However, the wide distribution of T. bryosalmonae in rivers flowing to the Barents Sea indicates that climate change and heat waves may cause new disease outbreaks in northern regions
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