4,695 research outputs found
Chiral Skyrmionic matter in non-centrosymmetric magnets
Axisymmetric magnetic strings with a fixed sense of rotation and nanometer
sizes (chiral magnetic vortices or Skyrmions) have been predicted to exist in a
large group of non-centrosymmetric crystals more than two decades ago. Recently
these extraordinary magnetic states have been directly observed in thin layers
of cubic helimagnet (Fe,Co)Si. In this report we apply our earlier theoretical
findings to review main properties of chiral Skyrmions, to elucidate their
physical nature, and to analyse these recent experimental results on
magnetic-field-driven evolution of Skyrmions and helicoids in chiral
helimagnets.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, invited talk - JEMS-2010 ( 23-28 August, Krakow,
Poland
Magnetic Fluctuations and Correlations in MnSi - Evidence for a Skyrmion Spin Liquid Phase
We present a comprehensive analysis of high resolution neutron scattering
data involving Neutron Spin Echo spectroscopy and Spherical Polarimetry which
confirm the first order nature of the helical transition and reveal the
existence of a new spin liquid skyrmion phase. Similar to the blue phases of
liquid crystals this phase appears in a very narrow temperature range between
the low temperature helical and the high temperature paramagnetic phases.Comment: 11 pages, 16 figure
Solutions for real dispersionless Veselov-Novikov hierarchy
We investigate the dispersionless Veselov-Novikov (dVN) equation based on the
framework of dispersionless two-component BKP hierarchy. Symmetry constraints
for real dVN system are considered. It is shown that under symmetry reductions,
the conserved densities are therefore related to the associated Faber
polynomials and can be solved recursively. Moreover, the method of hodograph
transformation as well as the expressions of Faber polynomials are used to find
exact real solutions of the dVN hierarchy.Comment: 14 page
Stabilization of Skyrmion textures by uniaxial distortions in noncentrosymmetric cubic helimagnets
In cubic noncentrosymmetric ferromagnets uniaxial distortions suppress the
helical states and stabilize Skyrmion lattices in a broad range of
thermodynamical parameters. Using a phenomenological theory for modulated and
localized states in chiral magnets, the equilibrium parameters of the Skyrmion
and helical states are derived as functions of the applied magnetic field and
induced uniaxial anisotropy. These results show that due to a combined effect
of induced uniaxial anisotropy and an applied magnetic field Skyrmion lattices
can be formed as thermodynamically stable states in large intervals of magnetic
field and temperatures in cubic helimagnets, e.g., in intermetallic compounds
MnSi, FeGe, (Fe,Co)Si. We argue that this mechanism is responsible for the
formation of Skyrmion states recently observed in thin layers of
Fe_{0.5}Co_{0.5}Si [X.Z.Yu et al., Nature \textbf{465}(2010) 901].Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic structures and reorientation transitions in noncentrosymmetric uniaxial antiferromagnets
A phenomenological theory of magnetic states in noncentrosymmetric tetragonal
antiferromagnets is developed, which has to include homogeneous and
inhomogeneous terms (Lifshitz-invariants) derived from Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
couplings. Magnetic properties of this class of antiferromagnets with low
crystal symmetry are discussed in relation to its first known members, the
recently detected compounds Ba2CuGe2O7 and K2V3O8. Crystallographic symmetry
and magnetic ordering in these systems allow the simultaneous occurrence of
chiral inhomogeneous magnetic structures and weak ferromagnetism. New types of
incommensurate magnetic structures are possible, namely, chiral helices with
rotation of staggered magnetization and oscillations of the total
magnetization. Field-induced reorientation transitions into modulated states
have been studied and corresponding phase diagrams are constructed. Structures
of magnetic defects (domain-walls and vortices) are discussed. In particular,
vortices, i.e. localized non-singular line defects, are stabilized by the
inhomogeneous Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions in uniaxial noncentrosymmetric
antiferromagnets.Comment: 18 pages RevTeX4, 13 figure
Limb-Darkening of a K Giant in the Galactic Bulge: PLANET Photometry of MACHO 97-BLG-28
We present the PLANET photometric dataset for the binary-lens microlensing
event MACHO 97-BLG-28 consisting of 696 I and V-band measurements, and analyze
it to determine the radial surface brightness profile of the Galactic bulge
source star. The microlensed source, demonstrated to be a K giant by our
independent spectroscopy, crossed the central isolated cusp of the lensing
binary, generating a sharp peak in the light curve that was well-resolved by
dense (3 - 30 minute) and continuous monitoring from PLANET sites in Chile,
South Africa, and Australia. Our modeling of these data has produced stellar
profiles for the source star in the I and V bands that are in excellent
agreement with those predicted by stellar atmospheric models for K giants. The
limb-darkening coefficients presented here are the first derived from
microlensing, among the first for normal giants by any technique, and the first
for any star as distant as the Galactic bulge. Modeling indicates that the
lensing binary has a mass ratio q = 0.23 and an (instantaneous) separation in
units of the angular Einstein ring radius of d = 0.69 . For a lens in the
Galactic bulge, this corresponds to a typical stellar binary with a projected
separation between 1 and 2 AU. If the lens lies closer, the separation is
smaller, and one or both of the lens objects is in the brown dwarf regime.
Assuming that the source is a bulge K2 giant at 8 kpc, the relative lens-source
proper motion is mu = 19.4 +/- 2.6 km/s /kpc, consistent with a disk or bulge
lens. If the non-lensed blended light is due to a single star, it is likely to
be a young white dwarf in the bulge, consistent with the blended light coming
from the lens itself.Comment: 32 Pages, including 1 table and 9 postscript figures. (Revised
version has slightly modified text, corrected typo, and 1 new figure.)
Accepted for publication in 1999 Astrophysical Journal; data are now
available at http://www.astro.rug.nl/~plane
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