126 research outputs found
Magnetoresistive Effects in Ferromagnet-Superconductor Multilayers
We consider a nanoscale system consisting of Manganite-ferromagnet and
Cuprate-superconductor multilayers in a spin valve configuration. The
magnetization of the bottom Manganite-ferromagnet is pinned by a
Manganite-antiferromagnet. The magnetization of the top Manganite-ferromagnet
is coupled to the bottom one via indirect exchange through the superconducting
layers. We study the behavior of the critical temperature and the
magnetoresistance as a function of an externally applied parallel magnetic
field, when the number of Cuprate-superconductor layers are changed. There are
two typical behaviors in the case of a few monolayers of the Cuprates: a) For
small magnetic fields, the critical temperature and the magnetoresistance
change abruptly when the flipping field of the top Manganite-ferromagnet is
reached. b) For large magnetic fields, the multilayered system re-enters the
zero-resistance (superconducting) state after having become resistive (normal).Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures. 2004 Magnetism and Magnetic Materials Conferenc
Corner contribution to the entanglement entropy of strongly-interacting O(2) quantum critical systems in 2+1 dimensions
In a D=2+1 quantum critical system, the entanglement entropy across a
boundary with a corner contains a subleading logarithmic scaling term with a
universal coefficient. It has been conjectured that this coefficient is, to
leading order, proportional to the number of field components N in the
associated O(N) continuum field theory. Using density matrix
renormalization group calculations combined with the powerful numerical linked
cluster expansion technique, we confirm this scenario for the O(2)
Wilson-Fisher fixed point in a striking way, through direct calculation at the
quantum critical points of two very different microscopic models. The value of
this corner coefficient is, to within our numerical precision, twice the
coefficient of the Ising fixed point. Our results add to the growing body of
evidence that this universal term in the R\'enyi entanglement entropy reflects
the number of low-energy degrees of freedom in a system, even for strongly
interacting theories.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
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