147,711 research outputs found
Optical spectroscopy of plasmons and excitons in cuprate superconductors
An introduction is given to collective modes in layered, high Tc
superconductors. An experimental demonstration is treated of the mechanism
proposed by Anderson whereby photons travelling inside the superconductor
become massive, when the U(1) gauge symmetry is broken in the superconductor to
which the photons are coupled. Using the Ferrell-Tinkham sumrule the photon
mass is shown to have a simple relation to the spectral weight of the
condensate. Various forms of Josephson plasmons can exist in single-layer, and
bi-layecuprates. In the bi-layer cuprates a transverse optical plasma mode can
be observed as a peak in the c-axis optical conductivity. This mode appears as
a consequence of the existence of two different intrinsic Josephson couplings
between the CuO2 layers. It is strongly related to a collective oscillation
corresponding to small fluctuations of the relative phases of the two
condensates, which has been predicted in 1966 by A.J. Leggett for
superconductors with two bands of charge carriers. A description is given of
optical data of the high Tc cuprates demonstrating the presence of these and
similar collective modes.Comment: Article for a special issue of the Journal of Superconductivity
celebrating the 75th birthday of Michael Tinkham. Revtex4, 15 pages, 16
figures encapsulated postscrip
Short-range spin- and pair-correlations: a variational wave-function
A many-body wavefuction is postulated, which is sufficiently general to
describe superconducting pair-correlations, and/or spin-correlations, which can
occur either as long-range order or as finite-range correlations. The proposed
wave-function appears to summarize some of the more relevant aspects of the
rich phase-diagram of the high-Tc cuprates. Some of the states represented by
this wavefunction are reviewed: For superconductivity in the background of
robust anti-ferromagnetism, the Cooper-pairs are shown to be a superposition of
spinquantum numbers S=0 and S=1. If the anti-ferromagnetism is weak, a
continuous super-symmetric rotation is identified connecting s-wave
superconductivity to anti-ferromagnetism.Comment: LaTeX, 11 pages, 3 figures in eps format references update
Treatment of International Human Rights Violations in the United States
In our day and age, the violation of human rights has become a matter of
international concern. This article is focused on the sharing of those concerns by
the United States, in particular as manifested by the treatment of human rights
violations in the United States. Following introductory observations in Part I
highlighting the special commitment of the United States to the protection of
international human rights, the article will show, in Part II thereof, that in virtue
of Article 6, Clause [2] of the American Constitution (the Supremacy Clause),
human rights conventions are in principle self-executing in the United States.1
However, the United States invariably adds a reservation to its instruments of
ratification of such conventions proclaiming that they will not be self-executing
in the United States. Incorporating the provisions of human rights conventions
ratified by the United States into the country’s municipal legal system therefore
requires Congressional implementation legislation, which will be exemplified in
Part III with reference to the Torture Convention Implementation Act of 1994.
Part IV of the article is devoted to the exercise of universal jurisdiction by federal
courts, in virtue of Article 1, Section (8), Clause [10] of the Constitution, to bring
to justice those responsible for piracies and felonies on the High Seas and
offences against the law of nations.2 In the United States, universal jurisdiction of
federal courts is not confined to criminal prosecutions but has also been extended
by the Alien Tort Statute to civil actions by foreign victims of a tort that constitutes a violation of the law of nations or of a treaty entered into by the
United States.3 The treatment of human rights violations under the Alien Tort
Statute and similar legislation is the subject-matter of Part V of this article. Some
concluding observations to evaluate the above manifestations of the American
commitment to human rights, notably in view of considerations based on the
national interests of the United States and a perception of American
exceptionalism, will bring the article to a close in Part VI thereof.http://dflsc.law.duke.edu/am201
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