2,897 research outputs found
Conductivity and entanglement entropy of high dimensional holographic superconductors
We investigate the dependence of the conductivity and the entanglement
entropy on the space-time dimensionality in two holographic
superconductors: one dual to a quantum critical point with spontaneous symmetry
breaking, and the other modeled by a charged scalar that condenses at a
sufficiently low temperature in the presence of a Maxwell field. In both cases
the gravity background is asymptotically Anti de Sitter (AdS). In the large
limit we obtain explicit analytical results for the conductivity at zero
temperature and the entanglement entropy by a expansion. We show that the
entanglement entropy is always smaller in the broken phase. As dimensionality
increases, the entanglement entropy decreases, the coherence peak in the
conductivity becomes narrower and the ratio between the energy gap and the
critical temperature decreases. These results suggest that the condensate
interactions become weaker in high spatial dimensions.Comment: 38 pages, 7 figure
Vector feedback homogeneity and inner layout influence on fluxgate sensor parameters
Vector feedback is a concept which can significantly improve linearity and stability of a magnetic field sensor. The feedback coils effectively cancel the measured magnetic field in the inner volume of the triaxial sensor. Thus, in case of fluxgates, it suppresses one possible source of nonlinearity—cross-field sensitivity error. The triaxial sensor axes orthogonality should be primarily defined by the orientation of the feedback coils, while the sensitivities are defined by feedback coil constants. The influence of the homogeneity of the feedback field and the influence of the sensor inner layout on calibration parameters of a vectorially compensated triaxial fluxgate magnetometer are presented.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author’s final draft
High temperature behavior of Sr-doped layered cobaltites Y(Ba1-xSrx)Co2O5.5: phase stability and structural properties
In this article we present a neutron diffraction in-situ study of the thermal
evolution and high-temperature structure of layered cobaltites Y(Ba, Sr)Co2
O5+{\delta}. Neutron thermodiffractograms and magnetic susceptibility
measurements are reported in the temperature range 20 K <= T <= 570 K, as well
as high resolution neutron diffraction experiments at selected temperatures.
Starting from the as-synthesized samples with {\delta} ~ 0.5, we show that the
room temperature phases remain stable up to 550 K, where they start loosing
oxygen and transform to a vacancy-disordered "112" structure with tetragonal
symmetry. Our results also show how the so-called "122" structure can be
stabilized at high temperature (around 450 K) in a sample in which the addition
of Sr at the Ba site had suppressed its formation. In addition, we present the
structural and magnetic properties of the resulting samples with a new oxygen
content {\delta} ~ 0.25 in the temperature range 20 K <= T <= 300 K
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