229 research outputs found
Spin injection in Silicon at zero magnetic field
In this letter, we show efficient electrical spin injection into a SiGe based
\textit{p-i-n} light emitting diode from the remanent state of a
perpendicularly magnetized ferromagnetic contact. Electron spin injection is
carried out through an alumina tunnel barrier from a Co/Pt thin film exhibiting
a strong out-of-plane anisotropy. The electrons spin polarization is then
analysed through the circular polarization of emitted light. All the light
polarization measurements are performed without an external applied magnetic
field \textit{i.e.} in remanent magnetic states. The light polarization as a
function of the magnetic field closely traces the out-of-plane magnetization of
the Co/Pt injector. We could achieve a circular polarization degree of the
emitted light of 3 % at 5 K. Moreover this light polarization remains almost
constant at least up to 200 K.Comment: accepted in AP
The relativistic impulse approximation for the exclusive electrodisintegration of the deuteron
The electrodisintegration of the deuteron in the frame of the Bethe-Salpeter
approach with a separable kernel of the nucleon-nucleon interaction is
considered. This conception keeps the covariance of a description of the
process. A comparison of relativistic and nonrelativistic calculations is
presented. The factorization of the cross section of the reaction in the
impulse approximation is obtained by analytical calculations. It is shown that
the photon-neutron interaction plays an important role.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figures, 1 tabl
Electrical spin injection and detection in Germanium using three terminal geometry
In this letter, we report on successful electrical spin injection and
detection in \textit{n}-type germanium-on-insulator (GOI) using a
Co/Py/AlO spin injector and 3-terminal non-local measurements. We
observe an enhanced spin accumulation signal of the order of 1 meV consistent
with the sequential tunneling process via interface states in the vicinity of
the AlO/Ge interface. This spin signal is further observable up to
220 K. Moreover, the presence of a strong \textit{inverted} Hanle effect points
at the influence of random fields arising from interface roughness on the
injected spins.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
TTIP: Political and economic rationale and implications
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership will reduce tariffs and lower regulatory hurdles that currently impair trade between the EU and the US. However, TTIP has been controversial from the outset. Non-governmental organisations are concerned about lowered health and environmental standards, unions fear a further weakening of labour conditions, and economists debate whether or not there will actually be any noticeable impact on employment and GDP growth. This Forum, featuring contributions by the speakers at the 2015 Intereconomics conference, presents a balanced overview of both the prospective benefits as well as the possible drawbacks to the potentially monumental trade agreement
On isovector meson exchange currents in the Bethe-Salpeter approach
We investigate the nonrelativistic reduction of the Bethe-Salpeter amplitude
for the deuteron electrodisintegration near threshold energies. To this end,
two assumptions have been used in the calculations: 1) the static approximation
and 2) the one iteration approximation. Within these assumptions it is possible
to recover the nonrelativistic result including a systematic extension to
relativistic corrections. We find that the so-called pair current term can be
constructed from the -wave contribution of the deuteron Bethe-Salpeter
amplitude. The form factor that enters into the calculation of the pair current
is constrained by the manifestly gauge independent matrix elements.Comment: 15 pages, incl. 3 figures, to be published Phys. Rev.
Using exchange bias to extend the temperature range of square loop behavior in [Pt/Co] multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics.The temperature dependence of the magnetic properties of [Pt/Co]multilayers (ML), exhibiting perpendicular anisotropy, with and without exchange biasing with an antiferromagnet(AFM) has been investigated. Upon heating, a loss of the out-of-plane anisotropy and, consequently, of the remanence to saturation ratio is observed in these systems. However, such effect occurs at higher temperatures in the [Pt/Co] ML exchange coupled to the AFM than for the unbiased ML. This is attributed to the additional anisotropy induced to the ML by the ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic exchange coupling
Impact of gigahertz and terahertz transport regimes on spin propagation and conversion in the antiferromagnet IrMn
Control over spin transport in antiferromagnetic systems is essential for future spintronic applications with operational speeds extending to ultrafast time scales. Here, we study the transition from the gigahertz (GHz) to terahertz (THz) regime of spin transport and spin-to-charge current conversion (S2C) in the prototypical antiferromagnet IrMn by employing spin pumping and THz spectroscopy techniques. We reveal a factor of 4 shorter characteristic propagation lengths of the spin current at THz frequencies (∼0.5 nm) as compared to GHz experiments (∼2 nm). This observation may be attributed to different transport regimes. The conclusion is supported by extraction of sub-picosecond temporal dynamics of the THz spin current. We identify no relevant impact of the magnetic order parameter on S2C signals and no scalable magnonic transport in THz experiments. A significant role of the S2C originating from interfaces between IrMn and magnetic or non-magnetic metals is observed, which is much more pronounced in the THz regime and opens the door for optimization of the spin control at ultrafast time scales
Discriminant analysis of solar bright points and faculae I. Classification method and center-to-limb distribution
While photospheric magnetic elements appear mainly as Bright Points (BPs) at
the disk center and as faculae near the limb, high-resolution images reveal the
coexistence of BPs and faculae over a range of heliocentric angles. This is not
explained by a "hot wall" effect through vertical flux tubes, and suggests that
the transition from BPs to faculae needs to be quantitatively investigated. To
achieve this, we made the first recorded attempt to discriminate BPs and
faculae, using a statistical classification approach based on Linear
Discriminant Analysis(LDA). This paper gives a detailed description of our
method, and shows its application on high-resolution images of active regions
to retrieve a center-to-limb distribution of BPs and faculae. Bright "magnetic"
features were detected at various disk positions by a segmentation algorithm
using simultaneous G-band and continuum information. By using a selected sample
of those features to represent BPs and faculae, suitable photometric parameters
were identified in order to carry out LDA. We thus obtained a Center-to-Limb
Variation (CLV) of the relative number of BPs and faculae, revealing the
predominance of faculae at all disk positions except close to disk center (mu >
0.9). Although the present dataset suffers from limited statistics, our results
are consistent with other observations of BPs and faculae at various disk
positions. The retrieved CLV indicates that at high resolution, faculae are an
essential constituent of active regions all across the solar disk. We speculate
that the faculae near disk center as well as the BPs away from disk center are
associated with inclined fields
Femtometer Toroidal Structures in Nuclei
The two-nucleon density distributions in states with isospin , spin
=1 and projection =0 and 1 are studied in H, He,
Li and O. The equidensity surfaces for =0 distributions are
found to be toroidal in shape, while those of =1 have dumbbell shapes
at large density. The dumbbell shapes are generated by rotating tori. The
toroidal shapes indicate that the tensor correlations have near maximal
strength at fm in all these nuclei. They provide new insights and simple
explanations of the structure and electromagnetic form factors of the deuteron,
the quasi-deuteron model, and the , and =2 (-wave)
components in He, He and Li. The toroidal distribution has a
maximum-density diameter of 1 fm and a half-maximum density thickness of
0.9 fm. Many realistic models of nuclear forces predict these values,
which are supported by the observed electromagnetic form factors of the
deuteron, and also predicted by classical Skyrme effective Lagrangians, related
to QCD in the limit of infinite colors. Due to the rather small size of this
structure, it could have a revealing relation to certain aspects of QCD.Comment: 35 pages in REVTeX, 25 PostScript figure
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