43,870 research outputs found

    Ionization of hydrogen atoms by electron impact at 1eV, 0.5eV and 0.3eV above threshold

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    We present here triple differential cross sections for ionization of hydrogen atoms by electron impact at 1eV, 0.5eV and 0.3eV energy above threshold, calculated in the hyperspherical partial wave theory. The results are in very good agreement with the available semiclassical results of Deb and Crothers \cite{DC02} for these energies. With this, we are able to demonstrate that the hyperspherical partial wave theory yields good cross sections from 30 eV \cite{DPC03} down to near threshold for equal energy sharing kinematics.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure

    Extended Uniform Ginzburg-Landau Theory for Novel Multiband Superconductors

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    The recently discovered multiband superconductors have created a new class of novel superconductors. In these materials multiple superconducting gaps arise due to the formation of Cooper pairs on different sheets of the Fermi surfaces. An important feature of these superconductors is the interband couplings, which not only change the individual gap properties, but also create new collective modes. Here we investigate the effect of the interband couplings in the Ginzburg-Landau theory. We produce a general τ(2n+1)/2\tau^{(2n+1)/2} expansion (τ=1T/Tc\tau = 1-T/T_c) and show that this expansion has unexpected behaviour for n2n\geq 2. This point emphasises the weaker validity of the GL theory for lower temperatures and gives credence to the existence of hidden criticality near the critical temperature of the uncoupled subdominant band.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Novel superconductivity: from bulk to nano systems

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    We begin with an introduction of superconductivity by giving a brief history of the phenomenon. The phenomenological Ginzburg–Landau theory and the microscopic theory of Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer are outlined. In view of recently available multi-band superconductors, relevant theories of both types are discussed. Unlike the traditional GL theory an extended GL theory is developed relevant to temperatures below the critical temperature. Superconductivity in a nanosystem is the highlight of the remaining part of the paper. Theories and experiments are discussed to give an interested reader an updated account and overview of what is new in this active area of research

    Electronic phase separation due to magnetic polaron formation in the semimetallic ferromagnet EuB6_6 - A weakly-nonlinear-transport study

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    We report measurements of weakly nonlinear electronic transport, as measured by third-harmonic voltage generation V3ωV_{3\omega}, in the low-carrier density semimetallic ferromagnet EuB6_6, which exhibits an unusual magnetic ordering with two consecutive transitions at Tc1=15.6T_{c_1} = 15.6\,K and Tc2=12.5T_{c_2} = 12.5\,K. Upon cooling in zero magnetic field through the ferromagnetic transition, the dramatic drop in the linear resistivity at the upper transition Tc1T_{c_1} coincides with the onset of nonlinearity, and upon further cooling is followed by a pronounced peak in V3ωV_{3 \omega} at the lower transition Tc2T_{c_2}. Likewise, in the paramagnetic regime, a drop of the material's magnetoresistance R(H)R(H) precedes a magnetic-field-induced peak in nonlinear transport. A striking observation is a linear temperature dependence of V3ωpeak(H)V_{3\omega}^{\rm peak}(H). We suggest a picture where at the upper transition Tc1T_{c_1} the coalescing MP form a conducting path giving rise to a strong decrease in the resistance. The MP formation sets in at around T35T^\ast \sim 35\,K below which these entities are isolated and strongly fluctuating, while growing in number. The MP then start to form links at Tc1T_{c_1}, where percolative electronic transport is observed. The MP merge and start forming a continuum at the threshold Tc2T_{c_2}. In the paramagnetic temperature regime Tc1<T<TT_{c_1} < T < T^\ast, MP percolation is induced by a magnetic field, and the threshold accompanied by charge carrier delocalization occurs at a single critical magnetization.Comment: to appear in J. Kor. Phys. Soc (ICM2012 conference contribution

    Driven Heisenberg Magnets: Nonequilibrium Criticality, Spatiotemporal Chaos and Control

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    We drive a dd-dimensional Heisenberg magnet using an anisotropic current. The continuum Langevin equation is analysed using a dynamical renormalization group and numerical simulations. We discover a rich steady-state phase diagram, including a critical point in a new nonequilibrium universality class, and a spatiotemporally chaotic phase. The latter may be `controlled' in a robust manner to target spatially periodic steady states with helical order.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Published in Euro. Phys. Let

    Dynamic Scaling in a 2+1 Dimensional Limited Mobility Model of Epitaxial Growth

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    We study statistical scale invariance and dynamic scaling in a simple solid-on-solid 2+1 - dimensional limited mobility discrete model of nonequilibrium surface growth, which we believe should describe the low temperature kinetic roughening properties of molecular beam epitaxy. The model exhibits long-lived ``transient'' anomalous and multiaffine dynamic scaling properties similar to that found in the corresponding 1+1 - dimensional problem. Using large-scale simulations we obtain the relevant scaling exponents, and compare with continuum theories.Comment: 5 pages, 4 ps figures included, RevTe
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