4,256 research outputs found
Enhancement of vortex pinning in superconductor/ferromagnet bilayers via angled demagnetization
We use local and global magnetometry measurements to study the influence of
magnetic domain width w on the domain-induced vortex pinning in
superconducting/ferromagnetic bilayers, built of a Nb film and a ferromagnetic
Co/Pt multilayer with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy, with an insulating
layer to eliminate proximity effect. The quasi-periodic domain patterns with
different and systematically adjustable width w, as acquired by a special
demagnetization procedure, exert tunable vortex pinning on a superconducting
layer. The largest enhancement of vortex pinning, by a factor of more than 10,
occurs when w ~ 310 nm is close to the magnetic penetration depth.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev. B, Rapid Communication
Antisymmetric magnetoresistance in magnetic multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy
While magnetoresistance (MR) has generally been found to be symmetric in
applied field in non-magnetic or magnetic metals, we have observed
antisymmetric MR in Co/Pt multilayers. Simultaneous domain imaging and
transport measurements show that the antisymmetric MR is due to the appearance
of domain walls that run perpendicular to both the magnetization and the
current, a geometry existing only in materials with perpendicular magnetic
anisotropy. As a result, the extraordinary Hall effect (EHE) gives rise to
circulating currents in the vicinity of the domain walls that contributes to
the MR. The antisymmetric MR and EHE have been quantitatively accounted for by
a theoretical model.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Zero-Bias Anomalies in Narrow Tunnel Junctions in the Quantum Hall Regime
We report on the study of cleaved-edge-overgrown line junctions with a
serendipitously created narrow opening in an otherwise thin, precise line
barrier. Two sets of zero-bias anomalies are observed with an enhanced
conductance for filling factors and a strongly suppressed conductance
for . A transition between the two behaviors is found near . The zero-bias anomaly (ZBA) line shapes find explanation in
Luttinger liquid models of tunneling between quantum Hall edge states. The ZBA
for occurs from strong backscattering induced by suppression of
quasiparticle tunneling between the edge channels for the Landau
levels. The ZBA for arises from weak tunneling of quasiparticles
between the edge channels.Comment: version with edits for clarit
Unusual Magnetization Reversal in [Co/Pt]\u3csub\u3e4\u3c/sub\u3e Multilayers with Perpendicular Anisotropy
Unusual magnetization reversal of [Co(4 Å)/Pt(10 Å)]4 multilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy has been revealed macroscopically by magnetometry measurements and microscopically by magneto-optical Kerr effect microscopy and magnetic force microscopy (MFM) imaging. During the first-order reversal process, the magnetization first decreases, then reaches a plateau, and finally rises back to saturation, corresponding to expanding bubble domains, stationary domains, and fading contrast but unchanged boundary domains, respectively. MFM imaging reveals the existence of many submicron-scaled unreversed channels within the boundary of the “bubble” domains. The magnetization reversal behavior can be accounted for by the evolution of the unusual domain structures in different field regimes
Unusual Magnetization Reversal in [Co/Pt]\u3csub\u3e4\u3c/sub\u3e Multilayers with Perpendicular Anisotropy
Unusual magnetization reversal of [Co(4 Å)/Pt(10 Å)]4 multilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy has been revealed macroscopically by magnetometry measurements and microscopically by magneto-optical Kerr effect microscopy and magnetic force microscopy (MFM) imaging. During the first-order reversal process, the magnetization first decreases, then reaches a plateau, and finally rises back to saturation, corresponding to expanding bubble domains, stationary domains, and fading contrast but unchanged boundary domains, respectively. MFM imaging reveals the existence of many submicron-scaled unreversed channels within the boundary of the “bubble” domains. The magnetization reversal behavior can be accounted for by the evolution of the unusual domain structures in different field regimes
Thermoelectric effect in superconducting nanostructures
We study thermoelectric effects in superconducting nanobridges and
demonstrate that the magnitude of these effects can be comparable or even
larger than that for a macroscopic superconducting circuit. The reason is
related to a possibility to have very large gradients of electron temperature
within the nanobridge. The corresponding heat conductivity problems are
considered. It is shown that the nanoscale devices allow one to get rid of
masking effects related to spurious magnetic fields.Comment: minor changes in the text, RevTex, 7 page
Nano granular metallic Fe - oxygen deficient TiO composite films: A room temperature, highly carrier polarized magnetic semiconductor
Nano granular metallic iron (Fe) and titanium dioxide (TiO) were
co-deposited on (100) lanthanum aluminate (LaAlO) substrates in a low
oxygen chamber pressure using a pulsed laser ablation deposition (PLD)
technique. The co-deposition of Fe and TiO resulted in 10 nm
metallic Fe spherical grains suspended within a TiO matrix. The
films show ferromagnetic behavior with a saturation magnetization of 3100 Gauss
at room temperature. Our estimate of the saturation magnetization based on the
size and distribution of the Fe spheres agreed well with the measured value.
The film composite structure was characterized as p-type magnetic semiconductor
at 300 K with a carrier density of the order of . The
hole carriers were excited at the interface between the nano granular Fe and
TiO matrix similar to holes excited in the metal/n-type
semiconductor interface commonly observed in Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS)
devices. From the large anomalous Hall effect directly observed in these films
it follows that the holes at the interface were strongly spin polarized.
Structure and magneto transport properties suggested that these PLD films have
potential nano spintronics applications.Comment: 6 pages in Latex including 8 figure
Impurity-Induced Virtual Bound States in d-Wave Superconductors
It is shown that a single, strongly scattering impurity produces a bound or a
virtual bound quasiparticle state inside the gap in a -wave superconductor.
The explicit form of the bound state wave function is found to decay
exponentially with angle-dependent range. These states provide a natural
explanation of the second Cu NMR rate arising from the sites close to Zn
impurities in the cuprates. Finally, for finite concentration of impurities in
a -wave superconductor, we reexamine the growth of these states into an
impurity band, and discuss the Mott criterion for this band.Comment: 12 pages and 2 figures, RevTex, LA-UR-94-194
Microtubule binding by dynactin is required for microtubule organization but not cargo transport
Dynactin links cytoplasmic dynein and other motors to cargo and is involved in organizing radial microtubule arrays. The largest subunit of dynactin, p150glued, binds the dynein intermediate chain and has an N-terminal microtubule-binding domain. To examine the role of microtubule binding by p150glued, we replaced the wild-type p150glued in Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells with mutant ΔN-p150 lacking residues 1–200, which is unable to bind microtubules. Cells treated with cytochalasin D were used for analysis of cargo movement along microtubules. Strikingly, although the movement of both membranous organelles and messenger ribonucleoprotein complexes by dynein and kinesin-1 requires dynactin, the substitution of full-length p150glued with ΔN-p150glued has no effect on the rate, processivity, or step size of transport. However, truncation of the microtubule-binding domain of p150glued has a dramatic effect on cell division, resulting in the generation of multipolar spindles and free microtubule-organizing centers. Thus, dynactin binding to microtubules is required for organizing spindle microtubule arrays but not cargo motility in vivo
Central Structural Parameters of Early-Type Galaxies as Viewed with HST/NICMOS
We present surface photometry for the central regions of a sample of 33
early-type (E, S0, and S0/a) galaxies observed at 1.6 microns (H band) using
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We employ a new technique of two-dimensional
fitting to extract quantitative parameters for the bulge light distribution and
nuclear point sources, taking into consideration the effects of the
point-spread function. Parameterizing the bulge profile with a ``Nuker'' law,
we confirm that the central surface-brightness distributions largely fall into
two categories, each of which correlates with the global properties of the
galaxies. ``Core'' galaxies tend to be luminous ellipticals with boxy or pure
elliptical isophotes, whereas ``power-law'' galaxies are preferentially lower
luminosity systems with disky isophotes. Unlike most previous studies, however,
we do not find a clear gap in the distribution of inner cusp slopes; several
objects have inner cusp slopes (0.3 < gamma < 0.5) which straddle the regimes
conventionally defined for core and power-law type galaxies. The nature of
these intermediate objects is unclear. We draw attention to two objects in the
sample which appear to be promising cases of galaxies with isothermal cores
that are not the brightest members of a cluster. Unresolved nuclear point
sources are found in about 50% of the sample galaxies, roughly independent of
profile type, with magnitudes in the range m^{nuc}_H = 12.8 to 17.4 mag, which
correspond to M_H^{nuc} = -12.8 to -18.4 mag. (Abridged)Comment: To appear in The Astronomical Journal. Latex, 24 pages and 17 JPEG
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