33,588 research outputs found

    Conductance oscillations in mesoscopic rings: microscopic versus macroscopic picture

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    The phase of Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in mesoscopic metal rings in the presence of a magnetic field can be modulated by application of a DC-bias current I_DC. We address the question of how a variation of I_DC and hence of the microscopic phases of the electronic wave functions results in the macroscopic phase of the conductance oscillations. Whereas the first one can be varied continuously the latter has to be quantized for a ring in two-wire configuration by virtue of the Onsager symmetry relations. We observe a correlation between a phase flip by +/- pi and the amplitude of the oscillations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Shape-induced phenomena in the finite size antiferromagnets

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    It is of common knowledge that the direction of easy axis in the finite-size ferromagnetic sample is controlled by its shape. In the present paper we show that a similar phenomenon should be observed in the compensated antiferromagnets with strong magnetoelastic coupling. Destressing energy which originates from the long-range magnetoelastic forces is analogous to demagnetization energy in ferromagnetic materials and is responsible for the formation of equilibrium domain structure and anisotropy of macroscopic magnetic properties. In particular, crystal shape may be a source of additional uniaxial magnetic anisotropy which removes degeneracy of antiferromagnetic vector or artificial 4th order anisotropy in the case of a square cross-section sample. In a special case of antiferromagnetic nanopillars shape-induced anisotropy can be substantially enhanced due to lattice mismatch with the substrate. These effects can be detected by the magnetic rotational torque and antiferromagnetic resonance measurements.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. B, v.75, N17, 200

    Evidence for crossed Andreev reflection in superconductor-ferromagnet hybrid structures

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    We have measured the non-local resistance of aluminum-iron spin-valve structures fabricated by e-beam lithography and shadow evaporation. The sample geometry consists of an aluminum bar with two or more ferromagnetic wires forming point contacts to the aluminum at varying distances from each other. In the normal state of aluminum, we observe a spin-valve signal which allows us to control the relative orientation of the magnetizations of the ferromagnetic contacts. In the superconducting state, at low temperatures and excitation voltages well below the gap, we observe a spin-dependent non-local resistance which decays on a smaller length scale than the normal-state spin-valve signal. The sign, magnitude and decay length of this signal is consistent with predictions made for crossed Andreev reflection (CAR).Comment: RevTeX, 4 page

    Dimensionality effects on non-equilibrium electronic transport in Cu nanobridges

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    We report on non-equilibrium electronic transport through normal-metal (Cu) nanobridges coupled to large reservoirs at low temperatures. We observe a logarithmic temperature dependence of the zero-bias conductance, as well as a universal scaling behavior of the differential conductance. Our results are explained by electron-electron interactions in diffusive metals in the zero-dimensional limit.Comment: RevTex, 4 page

    Reduction of Eu3 + to Eu2 + in Al-Codoped Silica Glasses Fabricated by the Sol-Gel Technique and CO2-Laser Processing

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    The spectroscopic properties of europium in aluminium codoped silica glasses produced by the sol-gel technique have been studied with respect to the dopant concentrations and the thermal processing applied to the samples. After thermal annealing at temperatures up to 950_°C the bright red fluorescence around 613 nm characteristic for the trivalent europium ions (Eu3 +) has been observed. The lifetime was measured to be 0.1-2.4 ms depending on dopant concentrations and thermal treatment. Subsequent CO2-laser processing in air (short time remelting) gave rise to a bright blue fluorescence consisting of two broad bands, lying around 450 and 490 nm, with their peak position depending on the ratio between the aluminium and europium concentrations. The fluorescence lifetimes were found to be shorter than 1 μ s. This blue fluorescence is attributed to the divalent europium ion (Eu2 +), leading to the conclusion that the CO2-laser processing of europium doped alumina-silica glasses resulted in the reduction of the trivalent to the divalent europium ion. Laser processing could therefore be a valid alternative to conventional thermal annealing for the generation of Eu2 + in alumina-silica glasse

    A tunable, dual mode field-effect or single electron transistor

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    A dual mode device behaving either as a field-effect transistor or a single electron transistor (SET) has been fabricated using silicon-on-insulator metal oxide semiconductor technology. Depending on the back gate polarisation, an electron island is accumulated under the front gate of the device (SET regime), or a field-effect transistor is obtained by pinching off a bottom channel with a negative front gate voltage. The gradual transition between these two cases is observed. This dual function uses both vertical and horizontal tunable potential gradients in non-overlapped silicon-on-insulator channel

    [OII] emitters in the GOODS field at z~1.85: a homogeneous measure of evolving star formation

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    We present the results of a deep, near-infrared, narrow band imaging survey at a central wavelength of 1.062 microns (FWHM=0.01 microns) in the GOODS-South field using the ESO VLT instrument, HAWK-I. The data are used to carry out the highest redshift search for [OII]3727 emission line galaxies to date. The images reach an emission line flux limit (5 sigma) of 1.5 x 10^-17 erg cm^-2 s^-1, additionally making the survey the deepest of its kind at high redshift. In this paper we identify a sample of [OII]3727 emission line objects at redshift z~1.85 in a co-moving volume of ~4100 Mpc^3. Objects are selected using an observed equivalent width (EW_obs) threshold of EW_obs = 50 angstroms. The sample is used to derive the space density and constrain the luminosity function of [OII] emitters at z=1.85. We find that the space density of objects with observed [OII] luminosities in the range log(L_[OII]) > 41.74 erg s^-1 is log(rho)=-2.45+/-0.14 Mpc^-3, a factor of 2 greater than the observed space density of [OII] emitters reported at z~1.4. After accounting for completeness and assuming an internal extinction correction of A_Halpha=1 mag (equivalent to A_[OII]=1.87), we report a star formation rate density of rho* ~0.38+/-0.06 Msun yr^-1 Mpc^-3. We independently derive the dust extinction of the sample using 24 micron fluxes and find a mean extinction of A_[OII]=0.98+/-0.11 magnitudes (A_Halpha=0.52). This is significantly lower than the A_Halpha=1 (A[OII]=1.86) mag value widely used in the literature. Finally we incorporate this improved extinction correction into the star formation rate density measurement and report rho*~0.24+/-0.06 Msun yr^-1 Mpc^-3.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Note on Polarographic Determination of +6 Uranium

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    A polarographic method is proposed for determination of small amounts of +6 uranium. An aqueous solution of salicylic acid (1.6 g /l), sulphuric acid (0.4% v/ v) and thymol (0.009 %) is used as supporting electrolyte. This procedure is applicable in the concentration range from 5 to 50 μg of uranium per ml. of the solution used for polarographic measurement. Total amounts of 10 μg of uranium per sample can be determined with a standard error of ± 0.8 μg
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