463 research outputs found
Anisotropic magnetoresistance contribution to measured domain wall resistances of in-plane magnetised (Ga,Mn)As
We demonstrate the presence of an important anisotropic magnetoresistance
contribution to the domain wall resistance recently measured in thin-film
(Ga,Mn)As with in-plane magnetic anisotropy. Analytic results for simple domain
wall orientations supplemented by numerical results for more general cases show
this previously omitted contribution can largely explain the observed negative
resistance.Comment: 4 pages; submitted to Phys Rev
Benchmark experiments with global climate models applicable to extra-solar gas giant planets in the shallow atmosphere approximation
The growing field of exoplanetary atmospheric modelling has seen little work on standardised benchmark tests for its models, limiting understanding of the dependence of results on specific models and conditions. With spatially resolved observations as yet difficult to obtain, such a test is invaluable. Although an intercomparison test for models of tidally locked gas giant planets has previously been suggested and carried out, the data provided were limited in terms of comparability. Here, the shallow PUMA model is subjected to such a test, and detailed statistics produced to facilitate comparison, with both time means and the associated standard deviations displayed, removing the time dependence and providing a measure of the variability. Model runs have been analysed to determine the variability between resolutions, and the effect of resolution on the energy spectra studied. Superrotation is a robust and reproducible feature at all resolutions
Muon-spin rotation measurements of the vortex state in SrRuO: type-1.5 superconductivity, vortex clustering and a crossover from a triangular to a square vortex lattice
Muon-spin rotation has been used to probe vortex state in SrRuO. At
moderate fields and temperatures a lattice of triangular symmetry is observed,
crossing over to a lattice of square symmetry with increasing field and
temperature. At lower fields it is found that there are large regions of the
sample that are completely free from vortices which grow in volume as the
temperature falls. Importantly this is accompanied by {\it increasing} vortex
density and increasing disorder within the vortex-cluster containing regions.
Both effects are expected to result from the strongly temperature-dependent
long-range vortex attractive forces arising from the multi-band chiral-order
superconductivity.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Angular dependence of domain wall resistivity in artificial magnetic domain structures
We exploit the ability to precisely control the magnetic domain structure of
perpendicularly magnetized Pt/Co/Pt trilayers to fabricate artificial domain
wall arrays and study their transport properties. The scaling behaviour of this
model system confirms the intrinsic domain wall origin of the
magnetoresistance, and systematic studies using domains patterned at various
angles to the current flow are excellently described by an angular-dependent
resistivity tensor containing perpendicular and parallel domain wall
resistivities. We find that the latter are fully consistent with Levy-Zhang
theory, which allows us to estimate the ratio of minority to majority spin
carrier resistivities, rho-down/rho-up~5.5, in good agreement with thin film
band structure calculations.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Competing symmetries and broken bonds in superconducting vortex-antivortex molecular crystals
Hall probe microscopy has been used to image vortex-antivortex molecules induced in superconducting Pb films by the stray fields from square arrays of magnetic dots. We have directly observed spontaneous vortex-antivortex pairs and studied how they interact with added free (anti)fluxons in an applied magnetic field. We observe a variety of phenomena arising from competing symmetries which either drive added antivortices to join antivortex shells around dots or stabilize the translationally symmetric antivortex lattice between the dots. Added vortices annihilate antivortex shells, leading first to a stable “nulling state” with no free fluxons and then, at high densities, to vortex shells around the dots stabilized by the asymmetric antipinning potential. Our experimental findings are in good agreement with Ginzburg-Landau calculations
Room temperature magnetic imaging of magnetic storage media and garnet epilayers in the presence of external magnetic fields using a sub-micron GaAs SHPM
Cataloged from PDF version of article.A multipurpose room temperature scanning Hall probe microscope (RT-SHPM) system incorporating an ultra-high sensitive sub-micron GaAs Hall probe (active area of similar to0.8 x 0.8 mum(2) room temperature Hall coefficient of 0.3 Ohm /G) exhibiting extremely high magnetic field sensitivity (0.04G/root Hz) was used for the direct, non-invasive and quantitative imaging of magnetic field fluctuations in very close proximity to the surfaces of thin film magnetic storage media, Bi substituted iron garnet epilayers and demagnetized Sr-ferrite permanent magnets placed in external magnetic fields. A scanning tunnelling microscope tip integrated adjacent to the Hall probe was used for precise vertical positioning of the probe. RT-SHPM images of 1.4 MB written floppy disks clearly showed well-defined magnetic transitions to coalesce into small island-like structures under external perpendicular fields greater than 1300 Oe. The RT-SHPM is demonstrated to be a versatile means of quantitatively monitoring micron-sized magnetic domain structures in the presence of external magnetic fields at: room temperature. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
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Modelling the atmosphere of a template “hot Jupiter” exoplanet
Many models are used to study the possible atmospheric conditions of extrasolar gas giants, in particular “hot Jupiters”, gas giant planets closer than 0.1 AU to their parent stars, with orbital periods of the order of a few Earth days. It is important that the respective responses of these models to this relatively new regime be known, allowing the effects of using different models to be understood. Here, the use of an adapted form of the PUMA model is explored by carrying out an intercomparison test
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Biodegradation of the herbicide mecoprop-p with soil depth and its relationship with class III tfdA genes
Mecoprop-p [(R)-2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy) propanoic acid) is widely used 37 in agriculture and poses an environmental concern because of its susceptibility to leach 38 from soil to water. We investigated the effect of soil depth on mecoprop-p 39 biodegradation and its relationship with the number and diversity of tfdA related genes, 40 which are the most widely known genes involved in degradation of the 41 phenoxyalkanoic acid group of herbicides by bacteria. Mecoprop-p half-life (DT50) was 42 approximately 12 days in soil sampled from <30 cm depth, and increased progressively 43 with soil depth, reaching over 84 days at 70-80 cm. In sub-soil there was a lag period of 44 between 23 and 34 days prior to a phase of rapid degradation. No lag phase occurred in 45 top-soil samples prior to the onset of degradation. The maximum degradation rate was 46 the same in top-soil and sub-soil samples. Although diverse tfdAα and tfdA genes were 47 present prior to mecoprop-p degradation, real time PCR revealed that degradation was 48 associated with proliferation of tfdA genes. The number of tfdA genes and the most 49 probable number of mecoprop-p degrading organisms in soil prior to mecoprop-p 50 addition were below the limit of quantification and detection respectively. Melting 51 curves from the real time PCR analysis showed that prior to mecoprop-p degradation 52 both class I and class III tfdA genes were present in top- and sub-soil samples. However 53 at all soil depths only tfdA class III genes proliferated during degradation. Denaturing 54 gradient gel electrophoresis confirmed that class III tfdA genes were associated with 55 mecoprop-p degradation. Degradation was not associated with the induction of novel 56 tfdA genes in top- or sub-soil samples, and there were no apparent differences in tfdA 57 gene diversity with soil depth prior to or following degradation
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