549 research outputs found
Fermi Surface of the Electron-doped Cuprate Superconductor Nd_{2-x}Ce_xCuO_{4} Probed by High-Field Magnetotransport
We report on the study of the Fermi surface of the electron-doped cuprate
superconductor NdCeCuO by measuring the interlayer
magnetoresistance as a function of the strength and orientation of the applied
magnetic field. We performed experiments in both steady and pulsed magnetic
fields on high-quality single crystals with Ce concentrations of to
0.17. In the overdoped regime of we found both semiclassical
angle-dependent magnetoresistance oscillations (AMRO) and Shubnikov-de Haas
(SdH) oscillations. The combined AMRO and SdH data clearly show that the
appearance of fast SdH oscillations in strongly overdoped samples is caused by
magnetic breakdown. This observation provides clear evidence for a
reconstructed multiply-connected Fermi surface up to the very end of the
overdoped regime at . The strength of the superlattice potential
responsible for the reconstructed Fermi surface is found to decrease with
increasing doping level and likely vanishes at the same carrier concentration
as superconductivity, suggesting a close relation between translational
symmetry breaking and superconducting pairing. A detailed analysis of the
high-resolution SdH data allowed us to determine the effective cyclotron mass
and Dingle temperature, as well as to estimate the magnetic breakdown field in
the overdoped regime.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Spatial Correlation of Conduction Electrons in Metal with Complicated Geometry Of The Fermi Surface
The "density-density" correlation function of conduction electrons in metal
is investigated. It is shown, that the asymptotic behaviour of the CF depends
on the shape and the local geometry of the Fermi surface. In particular, the
exponent of power law which describes the damping of Friedel oscillations at
large r (-4 for an isotropic Fermi gas) is determined by local geometry of the
FS. The applications of the obtained results to calculations of the CF in a
metal near the electron topological transition and of the RKKY exchange
integral are considered as well.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures upon request (to appear in J.Phys.:CM,
1993
Little groups of irreps of O(3), SO(3), and the infinite axial subgroups
Little groups are enumerated for the irreps and their components in any basis
of O(3) and SO(3) up to rank 9, and for all irreps of C, C, C, D and D. The results are obtained
by a new chain criterion, which distinguishes massive (rotationally
inequivalent) irrep basis functions and allows for multiple branching paths,
and are verified by inspection. These results are relevant to the determination
of the symmetry of a material from its linear and nonlinear optical properties
and to the choices of order parameters for symmetry breaking in liquid
crystals.Comment: 28 pages and 3 figure
Possibility of long-range order in clean mesoscopic cylinders
A microscopic Hamiltonian of the magnetostatic interaction is discussed. This
long-range interaction can play an important role in mesoscopic systems leading
to an ordered ground state.
The self-consistent mean field approximation of the magnetostatic interaction
is performed to give an effective Hamiltonian from which the spontaneous,
self-sustaining currents can be obtained.
To go beyond the mean field approximation the mean square fluctuation of the
total momentum is calculated and its influence on self-sustaining currents in
mesoscopic cylinders with quasi-1D and quasi-2D conduction is considered. Then,
by the use of the microscopic Hamiltonian of the magnetostatic interaction for
a set of stacked rings, the problem of long-range order is discussed. The
temperature below which the system is in an ordered state is
determined.Comment: 14 pages, REVTeX, 5 figures, in print in Phys. Rev.
A Robust Cross-Linking Strategy for Block Copolymer Worms Prepared via Polymerization-Induced Self-Assembly
A poly(glycerol monomethacrylate) (PGMA) chain transfer agent is chain-extended by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) statistical copolymerization of 2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate (HPMA) with glycidyl methacrylate (GlyMA) in concentrated aqueous solution via polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA). A series of five free-standing worm gels is prepared by fixing the overall degree of polymerization of the core-forming block at 144 while varying its GlyMA content from 0 to 20 mol %. 1H NMR kinetics indicated that GlyMA is consumed much faster than HPMA, producing a GlyMA-rich sequence close to the PGMA stabilizer block. Temperature-dependent oscillatory rheological studies indicate that increasing the GlyMA content leads to progressively less thermoresponsive worm gels, with no degelation on cooling being observed for worms containing 20 mol % GlyMA. The epoxy groups in the GlyMA residues can be ring-opened using 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES) in order to prepare core cross-linked worms via hydrolysis-condensation with the siloxane groups and/or hydroxyl groups on the HPMA residues. Perhaps surprisingly, 1H NMR analysis indicates that the epoxy-amine reaction and the intermolecular cross-linking occur on similar time scales. Cross-linking leads to stiffer worm gels that do not undergo degelation upon cooling. Dynamic light scattering studies and TEM analyses conducted on linear worms exposed to either methanol (a good solvent for both blocks) or anionic surfactant result in immediate worm dissociation. In contrast, cross-linked worms remain intact under such conditions, provided that the worm cores comprise at least 10 mol % GlyMA
Exploring attitudes to edgy urban destinations: the case of Deptford, London
The role of tourists and tourism in urban development is not fully understood. Research has focused on tourism districts within city centres, but less is known about tourism in peripheral, less affluent urban districts. These areas can appeal to visitors as edgy alternatives to mainstream destinations. This study establishes who is interested in visiting and why, and it explores the underlying rationale for negative attitudes. The aims are addressed by an in-depth analysis of Deptford in South East London. This area is a relatively deprived part of a world city, albeit one that has long been earmarked as London's next cool district. The study uses a mix of different sources to analyse the case. Responses to a New York Times article on Deptford are analysed and the attitudes of actual visitors and key stakeholders are explored. The discussion includes an examination of different interpretations and attitudes towards the notion of edginess. Edginess is deemed attractive by certain audiences; something linked to a reverence for working-class life in the arts. The study concludes that, whilst edginess is a noted characteristic, what people appreciate about Deptford is its ‘distinctive ordinariness’ – its contrast with more polished and contrived urban districts
Order parameter symmetry in ferromagnetic superconductors
We analyze the symmetry and the nodal structure of the superconducting order
parameter in a cubic ferromagnet, such as ZrZn. We demonstrate how the
order parameter symmetry evolves when the electromagnetic interaction of the
conduction electrons with the internal magnetic induction and the spin-orbit
coupling are taken into account. These interactions break the cubic symmetry
and lift the degeneracy of the order parameter. It is shown that the order
parameter which appears immediately below the critical temperature has two
components, and its symmetry is described by {\em co-representations} of the
magnetic point groups. This allows us to make predictions about the location of
the gap nodes.Comment: 12 pages, ReVTeX, submitted to PR
Human Behavior and Marine Plastic Pollution
This text offers engineers and scientists an up-to-date review of the subject and the state of the art as summarized by key researchers in the field
Importance of Correlation Effects on Magnetic Anisotropy in Fe and Ni
We calculate magnetic anisotropy energy of Fe and Ni by taking into account
the effects of strong electronic correlations, spin-orbit coupling, and
non-collinearity of intra-atomic magnetization. The LDA+U method is used and
its equivalence to dynamical mean-field theory in the static limit is
emphasized. Both experimental magnitude of MAE and direction of magnetization
are predicted correctly near U=4 eV for Ni and U=3.5 eV for Fe. Correlations
modify one-electron spectra which are now in better agreement with experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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