18,602 research outputs found
Finite times to equipartition in the thermodynamic limit
We study the time scale T to equipartition in a 1D lattice of N masses
coupled by quartic nonlinear (hard) springs (the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam beta model).
We take the initial energy to be either in a single mode gamma or in a package
of low frequency modes centered at gamma and of width delta-gamma, with both
gamma and delta-gamma proportional to N. These initial conditions both give,
for finite energy densities E/N, a scaling in the thermodynamic limit (large
N), of a finite time to equipartition which is inversely proportional to the
central mode frequency times a power of the energy density E/N. A theory of the
scaling with E/N is presented and compared to the numerical results in the
range 0.03 <= E/N <= 0.8.Comment: Plain TeX, 5 `eps' figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Out-of-plane magnetic domain structure in a thin film of La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 on SrTiO3 (001) observed by magnetic force microscopy
The room temperature out-of-plane magnetization of epitaxial thin films of La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 on SrTiO3 (001) has been investigated with magnetic force microscopy, using magnetic tips with very small coercivity, relative to the film. A clear magnetic pattern in the form of a checkerboard, with domain dimensions of a few hundred nanometers, was found for the thin, coherently strained films, which is approximately aligned along the maximum strain [110] and [1[overline 1]0] directions in the film. With increasing in-plane applied magnetic field, the magnetic contrast reduces, reflecting the rotation of the magnetization vector into the plane of the film. This process is reversible with the field. The out-of-plane magnetic pattern is not sensitive to rotation of the in-plane field. We attribute the observed out-of-plane magnetization component to an out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy, which is a remainder of the [111] magnetic easy axis in bulk La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 single crystal
Magnetic superlattice and finite-energy Dirac points in graphene
We study the band structure of graphene's Dirac-Weyl quasi-particles in a one-dimensional magnetic superlattice formed by a periodic sequence of alternating magnetic barriers. The spectrum and the nature of the states strongly depend on the conserved longitudinal momentum and on the barrier width. At the center of the superlattice Brillouin zone we find new Dirac points at finite energies where the dispersion is highly anisotropic, in contrast to the dispersion close to the neutrality point which remains isotropic. This finding suggests the possibility of collimating Dirac-Weyl quasi-particles by tuning the doping
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Quantum spin Hall effect in bound states in continuum
Moving the polarization of the incident wave along a meridian of the Poincaré sphere, experimentally we show that the coupling with the fundamental Bloch's surface waves of the mode, provide a spatially coherent, macroscopic spinmomentum locked propagation along the symmetry axes of the PhCM. This novel mechanism of light-spin manipulation enables a versatile implementation of spin-optical structures that may pave the way to novel strategies for light spin technology and photonic multiplatform implementations
Structural Properties of the Disordered Spherical and other Mean Field Spin Models
We extend the approach of Aizenman, Sims and Starr for the SK-type models to
their spherical versions. Such an extension has already been performed for
diluted spin glasses. The factorization property of the optimal structures
found by Guerra for the SK model, which holds for diluted models as well, is
verified also in the case of spherical systems, with the due modifications.
Hence we show that there are some common structural features in various mean
field spin models. These similarities seem to be quite paradigmatic, and we
summarize the various techniques typically used to prove the structural
analogies and to tackle the computation of the free energy per spin in the
thermodynamic limit.Comment: 24 page
HST and VLT observations of the neutron star 1E 1207.4-5209
1E 1207.4-5209, the peculiar Central Compact object in the G296.5+10.0
supernova remnant, has been proposed to be an "anti-magnetar" - a young neutron
star born with a weak dipole field. Accretion, possibly of supernova fallback
material, has also been invoked to explain a large surface temperature
anisotropy as well as the generation of peculiar cyclotron absorption features
superimposed to its thermal spectrum. Interestingly enough, a faint
optical/infrared source was proposed as a possible counterpart to 1E
1207.4-5209, but later questioned, based on coarse positional coincidence.
Considering the large offset of 1E 1207.4-5209 with respect to the center of
its host supernova remnant, the source should move at ~70 mas/yr. Thus, we
tested the association by measuring the proper motion of the proposed optical
counterpart. Using HST observations spanning 3.75 years, we computed a 3 sigma
upper limit of 7 mas/yr. Absolute astrometry on the same HST data set also
places the optical source significantly off the 99% confidence Chandra
position. This allows us to safely rule out the association. Using the HST data
set, coupled to ground-based observations collected at the ESO/VLT, we set the
deepest limits ever obtained to the optical/infrared emission from 1E
1207.4-5209. By combining such limits to the constraints derived from X-ray
timing, we rule out accretion as the source of the thermal anisotropy of the
neutron star.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
A long-period, violently-variable X-ray source in a young SNR
Observations with the Newton X-ray Multimirror Mission (XMM) show a strong
periodic modulation at 6.67+/-0.03 hours of the X-ray source at the centre of
the 2,000-year-old supernova remnant RCW 103. No fast pulsations are visible.
If genetically tied to the supernova remnant, the source could either be an
X-ray binary, comprising a compact object and a low-mass star in an eccentric
orbit, or an isolated neutron star. In the latter case, its age-period
combination would point to a peculiar magnetar, dramatically slowed-down,
possibly by a supernova debris disc. Both scenarios require non-standard
assumptions on the formation and evolution of compact objects in supernova
explosions.Comment: Accepted for publication in Science. Published online via Science
Express on 2006, July 6. 17 pages, 7 figure
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