57,620 research outputs found
Magnetic anisotropy switching in (Ga,Mn)As with increasing hole concentration
We study a possible mechanism of the switching of the magnetic easy axis as a
function of hole concentration in (Ga,Mn)As epilayers. In-plane uniaxial
magnetic anisotropy along [110] is found to exceed intrinsic cubic
magnetocrystalline anisotropy above a hole concentration of p = 1.5 * 10^21
cm^-3 at 4 K. This anisotropy switching can also be realized by post-growth
annealing, and the temperature-dependent ac susceptibility is significantly
changed with increasing annealing time. On the basis of our recent scenario
[Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 147203 (2005); Phys. Rev. B 73, 155204 (2006).], we
deduce that the growth of highly hole-concentrated cluster regions with [110]
uniaxial anisotropy is likely the predominant cause of the enhancement in [110]
uniaxial anisotropy at the high hole concentration regime. We can clearly rule
out anisotropic lattice strain as a possible origin of the switching of the
magnetic anisotropy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Reduced hierarchy equations of motion approach with Drude plus Brownian spectral distribution: Probing electron transfer processes by means of two- dimensionalcorrelation spectroscopy
We theoretically investigate an electron transfer (ET) process in a
dissipative environment by means of two-dimensional (2D) correlation
spectroscopy. We extend the reduced hierarchy equations of motion approach to
include both overdamped Drude and underdamped Brownian modes. While the
overdamped mode describes the inhomogeneity of a system in the slow modulation
limit, the underdamped mode expresses the primary vibrational mode coupled with
the electronic states. We outline a procedure for calculating 2D correlation
spectrum that incorporates the ET processes. The present approach has the
capability of dealing with system-bath coherence under an external
perturbation, which is important to calculate nonlinear response functions for
non-Markovian noise. The calculated 2D spectrum exhibits the effects of the ET
processes through the presence of ET transition peaks along the
axis, as well as the decay of echo signals.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures; J. Chem. Phys. 137 (2012
Spatial solitons under competing linear and nonlinear diffractions
We introduce a general model which augments the one-dimensional nonlinear
Schr\"{o}dinger (NLS) equation by nonlinear-diffraction terms competing with
the linear diffraction. The new terms contain two irreducible parameters and
admit a Hamiltonian representation in a form natural for optical media. The
equation serves as a model for spatial solitons near the supercollimation point
in nonlinear photonic crystals. In the framework of this model, a detailed
analysis of the fundamental solitary waves is reported, including the
variational approximation (VA), exact analytical results, and systematic
numerical computations. The Vakhitov-Kolokolov (VK) criterion is used to
precisely predict the stability border for the solitons, which is found in an
exact analytical form, along with the largest total power (norm) that the waves
may possess. Past a critical point, collapse effects are observed, caused by
suitable perturbations. Interactions between two identical parallel solitary
beams are explored by dint of direct numerical simulations. It is found that
in-phase solitons merge into robust or collapsing pulsons, depending on the
strength of the nonlinear diffraction
Superconducting Gap Anisotropy in NdCeCuO: Results from Photoemission
We have performed angle resolved photoelectron spectroscopy on the electron
doped cuprate superconductor NdCeCuO. A comparison of the
leading edge midpoints between the superconducting and normal states reveals a
small, but finite shift of 1.5-2 meV near the (,0) position, but no
observable shift along the zone diagonal near (/2,/2). This is
interpreted as evidence for an anisotropic superconducting gap in the electron
doped materials, which is consistent with the presence of d-wave
superconducting order in this cuprate superconductor.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, RevTex, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Lowest eigenvalue of the nuclear shell model Hamiltonian
In this paper we investigate regular patterns of matrix elements of the
nuclear shell model Hamiltonian , by sorting the diagonal matrix elements
from the smaller to larger values. By using simple plots of non-zero matrix
elements and lowest eigenvalues of artificially constructed "sub-matrices"
of , we propose a new and simple formula which predicts the lowest
eigenvalue with remarkable precisions.Comment: six pages, four figures, Physical Review C, in pres
A blowout jet associated with one obvious extreme-ultraviolet wave and one complicated coronal mass ejection event
In this paper, we present a detailed analysis of a coronal blowout jet
eruption which was associated with an obvious extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) wave
and one complicated coronal mass ejection (CME) event based on the
multi-wavelength and multi-view-angle observations from {\sl Solar Dynamics
Observatory} and {\sl Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory}. It is found
that the triggering of the blowout jet was due to the emergence and
cancellation of magnetic fluxes on the photosphere. During the rising stage of
the jet, the EUV wave appeared just ahead of the jet top, lasting about 4
minutes and at a speed of 458 - \speed{762}. In addition, obvious dark material
is observed along the EUV jet body, which confirms the observation of a
mini-filament eruption at the jet base in the chromosphere. Interestingly, two
distinct but overlapped CME structures can be observed in corona together with
the eruption of the blowout jet. One is in narrow jet-shape, while the other
one is in bubble-shape. The jet-shaped component was unambiguously related with
the outwardly running jet itself, while the bubble-like one might either be
produced due to the reconstruction of the high coronal fields or by the
internal reconnection during the mini-filament ejection according to the
double-CME blowout jet model firstly proposed by Shen et al. (2012b),
suggesting more observational evidence should be supplied to clear the current
ambiguity based on large samples of blowout jets in future studies.Comment: APJ, Accepted October 19, 201
Simultaneous Transmission and Reflection Beamforming Design for RIS-Aided MU-MISO
In this paper, we study the beamforming design for the simultaneous transmission and reflection reconfigurable intelligent surface (STAR-RIS) assisted MU-MISO system, where the energy splitting (ES) mode is adopted for STAR-RIS. We aim to jointly design the beamforming strategy at the BS and the transmission-reflection coefficients (TRCs) at the STAR-RIS to minimize the total downlink transmit power of the base station (BS) subject to each user's SINR constraint. The formulated optimization problem is difficult to solve directly, and therefore we employ the iterative alternating optimization (AO) framework to obtain suboptimal solutions with promising performance. Specifically, we propose an AO-based solution to optimize each amplitude and phase of the TRCs at the STAR-RIS separately in a sequential manner, where two distinct approaches are introduced for the design of the amplitudes of STAR-RIS elements. Simulation results show that the proposed joint beamforming design at BS and passive design at STAR-RIS achieves a promising performance, and requires fewer iterations compared with the state-of-the-art
A new small satellite sunspot triggering recurrent standard- and blowout-coronal jets
In this paper,we report a detailed analysis of recurrent jets originated from
a location with emerging, canceling and converging negative magnetic field at
the east edge of NOAA active region AR11166 from 2011 March 09 to 10. The event
presented several interesting features. First, a satellite sunspot appeared and
collided with a pre-existing opposite polarity magnetic field and caused a
recurrent solar jet event. Second, the evolution of the jets showed
blowout-like nature and standard characteristics. Third, the satellite sunspot
exhibited a motion toward southeast of AR11166 and merged with the emerging
flux near the opposite polarity sunspot penumbra, which afterward, due to flux
convergence and cancellation episodes, caused recurrent jets. Fourth, three of
the blowout jets associated with coronal mass ejections (CMEs), were observed
from field of view of the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory. Fifth,
almost all the blowout jet eruptions were accompanied with flares or with more
intense brightening in the jet base region, while almost standard jets did not
manifest such obvious feature during eruptions. The most important, the blowout
jets were inclined to faster and larger scale than the standard jets. The
standard jets instead were inclined to relative longer-lasting. The obvious
shearing and twisting motions of the magnetic field may be interpreted as due
to the shearing and twisting motions for a blowout jet eruption. From the
statistical results, about 30% blowout jets directly developed into CMEs. It
suggests that the blowout jets and CMEs should have a tight relationship.Comment: ApJ 18 pages, 7 figure
Chiral Sigma Model with Pion Mean Field in Finite Nuclei
The properties of infinite matter and finite nuclei are studied by using the
chiral sigma model in the framework of the relativistic mean field theory. We
reconstruct an extended chiral sigma model in which the omega meson mass is
generated dynamically by the sigma condensation in the vacuum in the same way
as the nucleon mass. All the parameters of chiral sigma model are essentially
fixed from the hadron properties in the free space. In nuclear matter, the
saturation property comes out right, but the incompressibility is too large and
the scalar and vector potentials are about a half of the phenomenological ones,
respectively. This fact is reflected to the properties of finite nuclei. We
calculate N = Z even-even mass nuclei between N = 16 and N = 34. The extended
chiral sigma model without the pion mean field leads to the result that the
magic number appears at N = 18 instead of N = 20 and the magic number does not
appear at N = 28 due to the above mentioned nuclear matter properties. The
latter problem, however, could be removed by the introduction of the finite
pion mean field with the appearance of the magic number at N = 28. We find that
the energy differences between the spin-orbit partners are reproduced by the
finite pion mean field which is completely a different mechanism from the
standard spin-orbit interaction.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. Prog. Theor. Phys. to be publishe
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