279 research outputs found
Magnetic oscillations of critical current in intrinsic Josephson-junction stacks
A key phenomenon related to the Josephson effect is oscillations of different
properties of superconducting tunneling junctions with magnetic field. We
consider magnetic oscillations of the critical current in stacks of intrinsic
Josephson junctions, which are realized in mesas fabricated from layered
high-temperature superconductors. The oscillation behavior is very different
from the case of a single junction. Depending on the stack lateral size,
oscillations may have either the period of half flux quantum per junction
(wide-stack regime) or one flux quantum per junction (narrow-stack regime). We
study in detail the crossover between these two regimes. Typical size
separating the regimes is proportional to magnetic field meaning that the
crossover can be driven by the magnetic field. In the narrow-stack regime the
lattice structure experiences periodic series of phase transitions between
aligned rectangular configuration and triangular configuration. Triangular
configurations in this regime is realized only in narrow regions near
magnetic-field values corresponding to integer number of flux quanta per
junction.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, subm. Phys. Rev.
Electrodynamics of Josephson vortex lattice in high-temperature superconductors
We studied response of the Josephson vortex lattice in layered
superconductors to the high-frequency c-axis electric field. We found a simple
relation connecting the dynamic dielectric constant with the perturbation of
the superconducting phase, induced by oscillating electric field. Numerically
solving equations for the oscillating phases, we computed the frequency
dependences of the loss function at different magnetic fields, including
regions of both dilute and dense Josephson vortex lattices. The overall
behavior is mainly determined by the c-axis and in-plane dissipation
parameters, which is inversely proportional to the anisotropy. The cases of
weak and strong dissipation are realized in
and underdoped correspondingly. The main feature of the response is the
Josephson-plasma-resonance peak. In the weak-dissipation case additional
satellites appear in the dilute regime mostly in the higher-frequency region
due to excitation of the plasma modes with the wave vectors set by the lattice
structure. In the dense-lattice limit the plasma peak moves to higher frequency
and its intensity rapidly decreases, in agreement with experiment and
analytical theory. Behavior of the loss function at low frequencies is well
described by the phenomenological theory of vortex oscillations. In the case of
very strong in-plane dissipation an additional peak in the loss function
appears below the plasma frequency. Such peak has been observed experimentally
in underdoped . It is caused by frequency
dependence of in-plane contribution to losses rather then a definite mode of
phase oscillations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Phys.Rev.B, supplementary
animations of oscillating local electric field can be found at
http://mti.msd.anl.gov/homepages/koshelev/projects/JPRinJVL/Nz2vc0_32vab6_0Anim.ht
Interaction of the Electromagnetic p-Waves with Thin Metal Films
For the first time it is shown that for thin metallic films thickness of
which not exceed thickness of skin-layer, the problem allows analytical
solution for arbitrary boundary value problems. The analysis of dependence of
coefficients of transmission, reflection and absorbtion on angle incidence,
thickness of films and coefficient of specular reflection is carried out.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Giant microwave-induced -periodic magnetoresistance oscillations in a two-dimensional electron gas with a bridged-gate tunnel point contact
We have studied the magnetoresistance of the quantum point contact fabricated
on the high mobility two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) exposed to microwave
irradiation. The resistance reveals giant -periodic oscillations with the
relative amplitude of up to \% resulting from the propagation
and interference of the edge magnetoplasmons (EMPs) in the sample. This giant
photoconductance is attributed to the considerably large local electron density
modulation in the vicinity of the point contact. We have also analyzed the
oscillation periods of the resistance oscillations and, comparing
the data with the EMP theory, extracted the EMP interference length . We
have found that the length substantially exceeds the distance between the
contact leads but rather corresponds to the distance between metallic contact
pads measured along the edge of the 2DEG. This resolves existing controversy in
the literature and should help to properly design highly sensitive microwave
and terahertz spectrometers based on the discussed effect.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Collective responses of Bi-2212 stacked junction to 100 GHz microwave radiation under magnetic field oriented along the c-axis
We studied a response of Bi-2212 mesa type structures to 100 GHz microwave
radiation. We found that applying magnetic field of about 0.1 T across the
layers enables to observe collective Shapiro step response corresponding to a
synchronization of all 50 intrinsic Josephson junctions (IJJ) of the mesa. At
high microwave power we observed up to 10th harmonics of the fundamental
Shapiro step. Besides, we found microwave induced flux-flow step position of
which is proportional to the square root of microwave power and that can exceed
at high enough powers 1 THz operating frequency of IJJ oscillations.Comment: 11 pages including 5 figures, accepted for publication in JETP
Letter
Evaporation and growth of crystals - propagation of step density compression waves at vicinal surfaces
We studied the step dynamics during crystal sublimation and growth in the
limit of fast surface diffusion and slow kinetics of atom attachment-detachment
at the steps. For this limit we formulate a model free of the quasi-static
approximation in the calculation of the adatom concentration on the terraces at
the crystal surface. Such a model provides a relatively simple way to study the
linear stability of a step train in a presence of step-step repulsion and an
absence of destabilizing factors (as Schwoebel effect, surface electromigration
etc.). The central result is that a critical velocity of the steps in the train
exists which separates the stability and instability regimes. When the step
velocity exceeds its critical value the plot of these trajectories manifests
clear space and time periodicity (step density compression waves propagate on
the vicinal surface). This ordered motion of the steps is preceded by a
relatively short transition period of disordered step dynamics.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
- …