168 research outputs found
2D Kagome Ordering in the 3D Frustrated Spinel Li2Mn2O4
muSR experiments on the geometrically frustrated spinel oxide, Li2Mn2O4, show
the development of spin correlations over a range of length scales with
decreasing temperature. Increased relaxation below 150 K is consistent with the
onset of spin correlations. Below 50 K, spin order on a length scale, which is
long range for the muSR probe, appears abruptly in temperature, consistent with
prior neutron diffraction results. The oscillations in the zero field asymmetry
are analyzed using a three frequency model. By locating the muon site this is
shown to be consistent with the unexpected 2D q = root 3 x root 3 structure on
the Kagome planes proposed originally from neutron data. Longitudinal field
data demonstrate that some spin dynamics persist even at 2 K. Thus, a very
complex magnetic ground state, featuring the co-existence of long length scale
2D ordering and significant spin dynamics, is proposed. This is unusual
considering the 3D topology of the Mn3+ spins in this material.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, to be submitted to J. Phys. Cond. Mat
Comparison of different methods for analyzing SR line shapes in the vortex state of type-II superconductors
A detailed analysis of muon-spin rotation (SR) spectra in the vortex
state of type-II superconductors using different theoretical models is
presented. Analytical approximations of the London and Ginzburg-Landau (GL)
models, as well as an exact solution of the GL model were used. The limits of
the validity of these models and the reliability to extract parameters such as
the magnetic penetration depth and the coherence length from
the experimental SR spectra were investigated. The analysis of the
simulated SR spectra showed that at high magnetic fields there is a strong
correlation between obtained and for any value of the
Ginzburg-Landau parameter . The smaller the applied
magnetic field is, the smaller is the possibility to find the correct value of
. A simultaneous determination of and without any
restrictions is very problematic, independent of the model used to describe the
vortex state. It was found that for extreme type-II superconductors and low
magnetic fields, the fitted value of is practically independent of
. The second-moment method frequently used to analyze SR spectra by
means of a multi-component Gaussian fit, generally yields reliable values of
in the whole range of applied fields
( and are the first and second critical fields, respectively).
These results are also relevant for the interpretation of small-angle neutron
scattering (SANS) experiments of the vortex state in type-II superconductors.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figure
Evidence for a two component magnetic response in UPt3
The magnetic response of the heavy fermion superconductor UPt_3 has been
investigated on a microscopic scale by muon Knight shift studies. Two distinct
and isotropic Knight shifts have been found for the field in the basal plane.
While the volume fractions associated with the two Knight shifts are
approximately equal at low and high temperatures, they show a dramatic and
opposite temperature dependence around T_N. Our results are independent on the
precise muon localization site. We conclude that UPt_3 is characterized by a
two component magnetic response.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Growth inhibition of an Araucaria angustifolia (Coniferopsida) fungal seed pathogen, Neofusicoccum parvum, by soil streptomycetes
Background: Araucariaceae are important forest trees of the southern hemisphere. Life expectancy of their seedlings can largely be reduced by fungal infections. In this study we have isolated and characterized such a fungus and investigated the potentia
Understanding the SR spectra of MnSi without magnetic polarons
Transverse-field muon-spin rotation (SR) experiments were performed on a
single crystal sample of the non-centrosymmetric system MnSi. The observed
angular dependence of the muon precession frequencies matches perfectly the one
of the Mn-dipolar fields acting on the muons stopping at a 4a position of the
crystallographic structure. The data provide a precise determination of the
magnetic dipolar tensor. In addition, we have calculated the shape of the field
distribution expected below the magnetic transition temperature at the 4a
muon-site when no external magnetic field is applied. We show that this field
distribution is consistent with the one reported by zero-field SR studies.
Finally, we present ab initio calculations based on the density-functional
theory which confirm the position of the muon stopping site inferred from
transverse-field SR. In view of the presented evidence we conclude that
the SR response of MnSi can be perfectly and fully understood without
invoking a hypothetical magnetic polaron state.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure
Hybrid paramagnon phonon modes at elevated temperatures in EuTiO3
EuTiO3 (ETO) has recently experienced an enormous revival of interest because
of its possible multiferroic properties which are currently in the focus of
research. Unfortunately ETO is an unlikely candidate for enlarged
multifunctionality since the mode softening - typical for ferroelectrics -
remains incomplete, and the antiferromagnetic properties appear at 5.5K only.
However, a strong coupling between lattice and Eu spins exists and leads to the
appearance of a magnon-phonon-hybrid mode at elevated temperatures as evidenced
by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), muon spin rotation ({\mu}SR)
experiments and model predictions based on a coupled spin-polarizability
Hamiltonian. This novel finding supports the notion of strong
magneto-dielectric (MD) effects being realized in ETO and opens new strategies
in material design and technological applications.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Muon spin rotation and relaxation in magnetic materials
A review of the muon spin rotation and relaxation (SR) studies on
magnetic materials published from July 1993 is presented. It covers the
investigation of magnetic phase diagrams, of spin dynamics and the analysis of
the magnetic properties of superconductors. We have chosen to focus on selected
experimental works in these different topics. In addition, a list of published
works is provided.Comment: Review article, 59 pages, LaTeX with IoP macro
Spin dynamics and spin freezing in the triangular lattice antiferromagnets FeGa2S4 and NiGa2S4
Magnetic susceptibility and muon spin relaxation (muSR) experiments have been
carried out on the quasi-2D triangular-lattice spin S = 2 antiferromagnet
FeGa2S4. The muSR data indicate a sharp onset of a frozen or nearly-frozen spin
state at T* = 31(2) K, twice the spin-glass-like freezing temperature T_f =
16(1) K. The susceptibility becomes field dependent below T*, but no sharp
anomaly is observed in any bulk property. A similar transition is observed in
muSR data from the spin-1 isomorph NiGa2S4. In both compounds the dynamic muon
spin relaxation rate lambda_d(T) above T* agrees well with a calculation of
spin-lattice relaxation by Chubukov, Sachdev, and Senthil in the renormalized
classical regime of a 2D frustrated quantum antiferromagnet. There is no firm
evidence for other mechanisms. At low temperatures lambda_d(T) becomes
temperature independent in both compounds, indicating persistence of spin
dynamics. Scaling of lambda_d(T) between the two compounds is observed from
~T_f to ~1.5T*. Although the muSR data by themselves cannot exclude a truly
static spin component below T*, together with the susceptibility data they are
consistent with a slowly-fluctuating "spin gel" regime between T_f and T*. Such
a regime and the absence of a divergence in lambda_d(T) at T* are features of
two unconventional mechanisms: (1) binding/unbinding of Z_2 vortex excitations,
and (2) impurity spins in a nonmagnetic spin-nematic ground state. The absence
of a sharp anomaly or history dependence at T* in the susceptibility of
FeGa2S4, and the weakness of such phenomena in NiGa2S4, strongly suggest
transitions to low-temperature phases with unconventional dynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Magnetoresistance of UPt3
We have performed measurements of the temperature dependence of the
magnetoresistance up to 9 T in bulk single crystals of UPt3 with the magnetic
field along the b axis, the easy magnetization axis. We have confirmed previous
results for transverse magnetoresistance with the current along the c axis, and
report measurements of the longitudinal magnetoresistance with the current
along the b axis. The presence of a linear term in both cases indicates broken
orientational symmetry associated with magnetic order. With the current along
the c axis the linear term appears near 5 K, increasing rapidly with decreasing
temperature. For current along the b axis the linear contribution is negative.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Quantum Fluids and Solids Conference
(QFS 2006
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