6,103 research outputs found
Absence of magnetically-induced fractional quantization in atomic contacts
Using the mechanically controlled break junction technique at low
temperatures and under cryogenic vacuum conditions we have studied atomic
contacts of several magnetic (Fe, Co and Ni) and non-magnetic (Pt) metals,
which recently were claimed to show fractional conductance quantization. In the
case of pure metals we see no quantization of the conductance nor
half-quantization, even when high magnetic fields are applied. On the other
hand, features in the conductance similar to (fractional) quantization are
observed when the contact is exposed to gas molecules. Furthermore, the absence
of fractional quantization when the contact is bridged by H_2 indicates the
current is never fully polarized for the metals studied here. Our results are
in agreement with recent model calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Ultrafast all-optical wavelength conversion in silicon waveguides using femtosecond pump-probe pulses
Experimental results on ultrafast all-optical wavelength conversion in silicon-on-insulator waveguides are presented. Red and blue shifts of 10nm have been observed in femtosecond pump-probe experiments. Alloptical switching and the importance of waveguide dispersion are discussed
Normal-Superconducting Phase Transition Mimicked by Current Noise
As a superconductor goes from the normal state into the superconducting
state, the voltage vs. current characteristics at low currents change from
linear to non-linear. We show theoretically and experimentally that the
addition of current noise to non-linear voltage vs. current curves will create
ohmic behavior. Ohmic response at low currents for temperatures below the
critical temperature mimics the phase transition and leads to incorrect
values for and the critical exponents and . The ohmic response
occurs at low currents, when the applied current is smaller than the
width of the probability distribution , and will occur in both the
zero-field transition and the vortex-glass transition. Our results indicate
that the transition temperature and critical exponents extracted from the
conventional scaling analysis are inaccurate if current noise is not filtered
out. This is a possible explanation for the wide range of critical exponents
found in the literature.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Effects of Self-field and Low Magnetic Fields on the Normal-Superconducting Phase Transition
Researchers have studied the normal-superconducting phase transition in the
high- cuprates in a magnetic field (the vortex-glass or Bose-glass
transition) and in zero field. Often, transport measurements in "zero field"
are taken in the Earth's ambient field or in the remnant field of a magnet. We
show that fields as small as the Earth's field will alter the shape of the
current vs. voltage curves and will result in inaccurate values for the
critical temperature and the critical exponents and , and can
even destroy the phase transition. This indicates that without proper screening
of the magnetic field it is impossible to determine the true zero-field
critical parameters, making correct scaling and other data analysis impossible.
We also show, theoretically and experimentally, that the self-field generated
by the current flowing in the sample has no effect on the current vs. voltage
isotherms.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Numerical Study of Order in a Gauge Glass Model
The XY model with quenched random phase shifts is studied by a T=0 finite
size defect energy scaling method in 2d and 3d. The defect energy is defined by
a change in the boundary conditions from those compatible with the true ground
state configuration for a given realization of disorder. A numerical technique,
which is exact in principle, is used to evaluate this energy and to estimate
the stiffness exponent . This method gives in
2d and in 3d, which are considerably larger than
previous estimates, strongly suggesting that the lower critical dimension is
less than three. Some arguments in favor of these new estimates are given.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revtex. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
High-Field Electrical Transport in Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes
Using low-resistance electrical contacts, we have measured the intrinsic
high-field transport properties of metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes.
Individual nanotubes appear to be able to carry currents with a density
exceeding 10^9 A/cm^2. As the bias voltage is increased, the conductance drops
dramatically due to scattering of electrons. We show that the current-voltage
characteristics can be explained by considering optical or zone-boundary phonon
emission as the dominant scattering mechanism at high field.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Delta Excitations in Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering
We derive the contribution of -h excitations to quasielastic
charged-current neutrino-nucleus scattering in the framework of relativistic
mean-field theory. We discuss the effect of production on the
determination of the axial mass in neutrino scattering experiments.Comment: 14 pages, revtex, 3 postscript figures (available upon request
Is there a vortex-glass transition in high-temperature superconductors?
We show that DC voltage versus current measurements of a YBCO micro-bridge in
a magnetic field can be collapsed onto scaling functions proposed by Fisher,
Fisher, and Huse, as is widely reported in the literature. We find, however,
that good data collapse is achieved for a wide range of critical exponents and
temperatures. These results strongly suggest that agreement with scaling alone
does not prove the existence of a phase transition. We propose a criterion to
determine if the data collapse is valid, and thus if a phase transition occurs.
To our knowledge, none of the data reported in the literature meet our
criterion.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Phase Transition in the Two-Dimensional Gauge Glass
The two-dimensional XY gauge glass, which describes disordered
superconducting grains in strong magnetic fields, is investigated, with regard
to the possibility of a glass transition. We compute the glass susceptibility
and the correlation function of the system via extensive numerical simulations
and perform the finite-size scaling analysis. This gives strong evidence for a
finite-temperature transition, which is expected to be of a novel type.Comment: 5pages, 3 figures, revtex, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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