19 research outputs found
Magnetic properties of some macromolecules of biological interest progress report no. 4, may - jul. 1964
Calibration of magnetic susceptibility measuring apparatus for polycrystalline samples of coronen
Cryogenic magnetometer development Final report, 1 Jul. 1964 - 7 Mar. 1967
Magnetometers for measuring stable magnetic fields produced by low field superconducting shield
Dilation of the Giant Vortex State in a Mesoscopic Superconducting Loop
We have experimentally investigated the magnetisation of a mesoscopic
aluminum loop at temperatures well below the superconducting transition
temperature . The flux quantisation of the superconducting loop was
investigated with a -Hall magnetometer in magnetic field intensities
between . The magnetic field intensity periodicity observed in
the magnetization measurements is expected to take integer values of the
superconducting flux quanta . A closer inspection of the
periodicity, however, reveal a sub flux quantum shift. This fine structure we
interpret as a consequence of a so called giant vortex state nucleating towards
either the inner or the outer side of the loop. These findings are in agreement
with recent theoretical reports.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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Argonne National Laboratory Reports
The abstracts are given of thirteen papers presented at a ''SQUID Symposium'' organized by the Division of Materials Sciences of the U.S. Department of Energy and held March 23-25, 1978, at the University of Virginia. Since SQUID systems have already been utilized in feasibility demonstration in geothermal reservoir exploration, it was recognized that these devices also hold great potential for many other important scientific measurements. Many of these are energy-related, and others include forefront investigations in a diverse group of scientific areas, from biomedical to earthquake monitoring. Research in SQUIDs has advanced so rapidly in recent years that it was felt that a symposium to review the current status and future prospects of the devices would be timely. The abstracts given present an overview of work in this area and hopefully provide an opportunity to increase awareness among basic and applied scientists of the inherent implications of the extreme measurement sensitivity in advanced SQUID systems