11,816 research outputs found
Spin-polarized quasiparticle transport in exchange-split superconducting aluminum on europium sulfide
We report on nonlocal spin transport in mesoscopic superconducting aluminum
wires in contact with the ferromagnetic insulator europium sulfide. We find
spin injection and long-range spin transport in the regime of the exchange
splitting induced by europium sulfide. Our results demonstrate that spin
transport in superconductors can be manipulated by ferromagnetic insulators,
and opens a new path to control spin currents in superconductors.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 5 figure
Observation of thermoelectric currents in high-field superconductor-ferromagnet tunnel junctions
We report on the experimental observation of thermoelectric currents in
superconductor-ferromagnet tunnel junctions in high magnetic fields. The
thermoelectric signals are due to a spin-dependent lifting of particle-hole
symmetry, and are found to be in excellent agreement with recent theoretical
predictions. The maximum Seebeck coefficient inferred from the data is about
, much larger than commonly found in metallic
structures. Our results directly prove the coupling of spin and heat transport
in high-field superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Recommended from our members
Special issue of applied economics on ‘Finance and the real economy’
Water rights, conflict and policy: Proceedings of a workshop held in Kathmandu, Nepal, January 22-24, 1996
IrrigationIrrigation managementWater rightsWater lawConflictFarmers' associations
Hard X-ray Variability of AGN
Aims: Active Galactic Nuclei are known to be variable throughout the
electromagnetic spectrum. An energy domain poorly studied in this respect is
the hard X-ray range above 20 keV.
Methods: The first 9 months of the Swift/BAT all-sky survey are used to study
the 14 - 195 keV variability of the 44 brightest AGN. The sources have been
selected due to their detection significance of >10 sigma. We tested the
variability using a maximum likelihood estimator and by analysing the structure
function.
Results: Probing different time scales, it appears that the absorbed AGN are
more variable than the unabsorbed ones. The same applies for the comparison of
Seyfert 2 and Seyfert 1 objects. As expected the blazars show stronger
variability. 15% of the non-blazar AGN show variability of >20% compared to the
average flux on time scales of 20 days, and 30% show at least 10% flux
variation. All the non-blazar AGN which show strong variability are
low-luminosity objects with L(14-195 keV) < 1E44 erg/sec.
Conclusions: Concerning the variability pattern, there is a tendency of
unabsorbed or type 1 galaxies being less variable than the absorbed or type 2
objects at hardest X-rays. A more solid anti-correlation is found between
variability and luminosity, which has been previously observed in soft X-rays,
in the UV, and in the optical domain.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Observation of Andreev bound states at spin-active interfaces
We report on high-resolution differential conductance experiments on
nanoscale superconductor/ferromagnet tunnel junctions with ultra-thin oxide
tunnel barriers. We observe subgap conductance features which are symmetric
with respect to bias, and shift according to the Zeeman energy with an applied
magnetic field. These features can be explained by resonant transport via
Andreev bound states induced by spin-active scattering at the interface. From
the energy and the Zeeman shift of the bound states, both the magnitude and
sign of the spin-dependent interfacial phase shifts between spin-up and
spin-down electrons can be determined. These results contribute to the
microscopic insight into the triplet proximity effect at spin-active
interfaces.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revte
Charge imbalance in superconductors in the low-temperature limit
We explore charge imbalance in mesoscopic normal-metal/superconductor
multiterminal structures at very low temperatures. The investigated samples,
fabricated by e-beam lithography and shadow evaporation, consist of a
superconducting aluminum bar with several copper wires forming tunnel contacts
at different distances from each other. We have measured in detail the local
and non-local conductance of these structures as a function of the applied bias
voltage V, the applied magnetic field B, the temperature T and the contact
distance d. From these data the charge-imbalance relaxation length lambda_Q* is
derived. The bias-resolved measurements show a transition from dominant elastic
scattering close to the energy gap to an inelastic two-stage relaxation at
higher bias. We observe a strong suppression of charge imbalance with magnetic
field, which can be directly linked to the pair-breaking parameter. In
contrast, practically no temperature dependence of the charge-imbalance signal
was observed below 0.5 K. These results are relevant for the investigation of
other non-local effects such as crossed Andreev reflexion and spin diffusion.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, RevTe
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