11,844 research outputs found

    Entangled spin clusters: some special features

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    In this paper, we study three specific aspects of entanglement in small spin clusters. We first study the effect of inhomogeneous exchange coupling strength on the entanglement properties of the S=1/2 antiferromagnetic linear chain tetramer compound NaCuAsO_{4}. The entanglement gap temperature, T_{E}, is found to have a non-monotonic dependence on the value of α\alpha, the exchange coupling inhomogeneity parameter. We next determine the variation of T_{E} as a function of S for a spin dimer, a trimer and a tetrahedron. The temperature T_{E} is found to increase as a function of S, but the scaled entanglement gap temperature t_{E} goes to zero as S becomes large. Lastly, we study a spin-1 dimer compound to illustrate the quantum complementarity relation. We show that in the experimentally realizable parameter region, magnetization and entanglement plateaus appear simultaneously at low temperatures as a function of the magnetic field. Also, the sharp increase in one quantity as a function of the magnetic field is accompanied by a sharp decrease in the other so that the quantum complementarity relation is not violated.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures. Accepted in Phys. Rev.

    Probabilistic Super Dense Coding

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    We explore the possibility of performing super dense coding with non-maximally entangled states as a resource. Using this we find that one can send two classical bits in a probabilistic manner by sending a qubit. We generalize our scheme to higher dimensions and show that one can communicate 2log_2 d classical bits by sending a d-dimensional quantum state with a certain probability of success. The success probability in super dense coding is related to the success probability of distinguishing non-orthogonal states. The optimal average success probabilities are explicitly calculated. We consider the possibility of sending 2 log_2 d classical bits with a shared resource of a higher dimensional entangled state (D X D, D > d). It is found that more entanglement does not necessarily lead to higher success probability. This also answers the question as to why we need log_2 d ebits to send 2 log_2 d classical bits in a deterministic fashion.Comment: Latex file, no figures, 11 pages, Discussion changed in Section

    Robust coupling of superconducting order parameter in a mesoscale NbN-Fe-NbN epitaxial structure

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    We report an unconventional and promising route to self-assemble distributed superconductor-ferromagnet-superconductor (S-F-S) Josephson Junctions on single crystal [100] MgO. These structures consist of [110] epitaxial nano-plaquettes of Fe covered with superconducting NbN films of varying thickness. The S-F-S structures are characterized by strong magnetoresistance (MR) anisotropy for the in-plane and out-of-plane magnetic fields. The stronger in-plane MR suggests decoherence of S-F-S junctions whose critical current follows a (1-T/Tc) and (1-T/Tc)1/2 dependence for T Tc and T<<Tc respectively, in accordance with the theory of supercurrent transport in such junctions.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Single hole doped strongly correlated ladder with a static impurity

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    We consider a strongly correlated ladder with diagonal hopping and exchange interactions described by tJt-J type hamiltonian. We study the dynamics of a single hole in this model in the presence of a static non-magnetic (or magnetic) impurity. In the case of a non-magnetic (NM) impurity we solve the problem analytically both in the triplet (S=1) and singlet (S=0) sectors. In the triplet sector the hole doesn't form any bound state with the impurity. However, in the singlet sector the hole forms bound states of different symmetries with increasing J/tJ/t values. Binding energies of those impurity-hole bound states are compared with the binding energy of a pair of holes in absence of any impurity. In the case of magnetic impurity the analytical eigenvalue equations are solved for a large (50 X 2) lattice. In this case also, with increasing J/tJ/t values, impurity-hole bound states of different symmetries are obtained. Binding of the hole with the impurity is favoured for the case of a ferromagnetic (FM) impurity than in the case of antiferromagnetic (AFM) impurity. However binding energy is found to be maximum for the NM impurity. Comparison of binding energies and various impurity-hole correlation functions indicates a pair breaking mechanism by NM impurity.Comment: 15 Pages, 6 figure

    Spin systems with dimerized ground states

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    In view of the numerous examples in the literature it is attempted to outline a theory of Heisenberg spin systems possessing dimerized ground states (``DGS systems") which comprises all known examples. Whereas classical DGS systems can be completely characterized, it was only possible to provide necessary or sufficient conditions for the quantum case. First, for all DGS systems the interaction between the dimers must be balanced in a certain sense. Moreover, one can identify four special classes of DGS systems: (i) Uniform pyramids, (ii) systems close to isolated dimer systems, (iii) classical DGS systems, and (iv), in the case of s=1/2s=1/2, systems of two dimers satisfying four inequalities. Geometrically, the set of all DGS systems may be visualized as a convex cone in the linear space of all exchange constants. Hence one can generate new examples of DGS systems by positive linear combinations of examples from the above four classes.Comment: With corrections of proposition 4 and other minor change

    Fibre Insulation Refractories in Reheating Furnaces

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    Reheating furnaces are the heart of a rolling and forging shop. Primary steel Ingot In changing shapes Into blooms, billets, bars, rods, slabs, plates, sheets, strips, rails, angles, channels and tubes has to be heated into pyro-plastic stage at 1200-1320°C in a reheating furnace. The temperature Is dependent upon the steel composition and rolling/forging technique. Hardy and Titteringtonl has dealt with the refractories of reheating furnaces. At this temperature enough iron oxide scale formation takes place due to which the hearth of the furnace has to bear the corrosive action of molten iron oxide and the walls, oxide atmosphere. In the heat treatment furnaces for annealing, normalising, hardening or stress relieving, the temperature Is never more than 1020°C and Is generally around 780°C. But unlike reheating furnaces the atmosphere Is either reducing or neutral without any suspension of inorganic material. Except for its hearth which has to bear the load of the work pieces, all the walls and roof has to withstand and conserve the heat only
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