57 research outputs found
MCViNE -- An object oriented Monte Carlo neutron ray tracing simulation package
MCViNE (Monte-Carlo VIrtual Neutron Experiment) is a versatile Monte Carlo
(MC) neutron ray-tracing program that provides researchers with tools for
performing computer modeling and simulations that mirror real neutron
scattering experiments. By adopting modern software engineering practices such
as using composite and visitor design patterns for representing and accessing
neutron scatterers, and using recursive algorithms for multiple scattering,
MCViNE is flexible enough to handle sophisticated neutron scattering problems
including, for example, neutron detection by complex detector systems, and
single and multiple scattering events in a variety of samples and sample
environments. In addition, MCViNE can take advantage of simulation components
in linear-chain-based MC ray tracing packages widely used in instrument design
and optimization, as well as NumPy-based components that make prototypes useful
and easy to develop. These developments have enabled us to carry out detailed
simulations of neutron scattering experiments with non-trivial samples in
time-of-flight inelastic instruments at the Spallation Neutron Source. Examples
of such simulations for powder and single-crystal samples with various
scattering kernels, including kernels for phonon and magnon scattering, are
presented. With simulations that closely reproduce experimental results,
scattering mechanisms can be turned on and off to determine how they contribute
to the measured scattering intensities, improving our understanding of the
underlying physics.Comment: 34 pages, 14 figure
Spin-orbit coupling control of anisotropy, ground state and frustration in 5d2 Sr2MgOsO6
The influence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on the physical properties of the
5d2 system Sr2MgOsO6 is probed via a combination of magnetometry, specific heat
measurements, elastic and inelastic neutron scattering, and density functional
theory calculations. Although a significant degree of frustration is expected,
we find that Sr2MgOsO6 orders in a type I antiferromagnetic structure at the
remarkably high temperature of 108 K. The measurements presented allow for the
first accurate quantification of the size of the magnetic moment in a 5d2
system of 0.60(2) muB - a significantly reduced moment from the expected value
for such a system. Furthermore, significant anisotropy is identified via a spin
excitation gap, and we confirm by first principles calculations that SOC not
only provides the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, but also plays a crucial role
in determining both the ground state magnetic order and the size of the local
moment in this compound. Through comparison to Sr2ScOsO6, it is demonstrated
that SOC-induced anisotropy has the ability to relieve frustration in 5d2
systems relative to their 5d3 counterparts, providing an explanation of the
high TN found in Sr2MgOsO6.Comment: Submitted to Scientific Report
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