598 research outputs found
Normal zone in -coated conductors
We consider the distribution of an electric field in YBCO-coated conductors
for a situation in which the DC transport current is forced into the copper
stabilizer due to a weak link -- a section of the superconducting film with a
critical current less than the transport current. The electric field in the
metal substrate is also discussed. The results are compared with recent
experiments on normal zone propagation in coated conductors for which the
substrate and stabilizer are insulated from each other. The potential
difference between the substrate and stabilizer, and the electric field in the
substrate outside the normal zone can be accounted for by a large screening
length in the substrate, comparable to the length of the sample. During a
quench, the electric field inside the interface between YBCO and stabilizer, as
well as in the buffer layer, can be several orders of magnitude greater than
the longitudinal macroscopic electric field inside the normal zone. We
speculate on the possibility of using possible microscopic electric discharges
caused by this large (kV/cm) electric field as a means to detect a
quench.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
The effects of superconductor-stabilizer interfacial resistance on quench of current-carrying coated conductor
We present the results of numerical analysis of a model of normal zone
propagation in coated conductors. The main emphasis is on the effects of
increased contact resistance between the superconducting film and the
stabilizer on the speed of normal zone propagation, the maximum temperature
rise inside the normal zone, and the stability margins. We show that with
increasing contact resistance the speed of normal zone propagation increases,
the maximum temperature inside the normal zone decreases, and stability margins
shrink. This may have an overall beneficial effect on quench protection quality
of coated conductors. We also briefly discuss the propagation of solitons and
development of the temperature modulation along the wire.Comment: To be published in Superconductor Science and Technology. This
preprint contains one animated figure (Fig. 6(a)). when asked whether you
want to play the content, click "Play". Acrobat Reader (Windows and Mac, but
not Linux) will play embedded flash movies. In the printed copy Fig. 6(b)
will show the temperature profile at gamma t=15
Two regimes for effects of surface disorder on the zero-bias conductance peak of tunnel junctions involving d-wave superconductors
Impurity-induced quasiparticle bound states on a pair-breaking surface of a
d-wave superconductor are theoretically described, taking into account
hybridization of impurity- and surface-induced Andreev states. Further a theory
for effects of surface disorder (of thin impurity surface layer) on the
low-bias conductance of tunnel junctions is developed. We find a threshold
for surface impurity concentration , which separates the two regimes
for surface impurity effects on the zero-bias conductance peak (ZBCP). Below
the threshold, surface impurities do not broaden the ZBCP, but effectively
reduce its weight and generate impurity bands. For low impurity bands can
be, in principle, resolved experimentally, being centered at energies of bound
states induced by an isolated impurity on the surface. For larger
impurity bands are distorted, move to lower energies and, beginning with the
threshold concentration , become centered at zero energy. With
increasing above the threshold, the ZBCP is quickly destroyed in the case
of strong scatterers, while it is gradually suppressed and broaden in the
presence of weak impurity potentials. More realistic cases, taking into account
additional broadening, not related to the surface disorder, are also
considered.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Designing self-assembling kinetics with differentiable statistical physics models
The inverse problem of designing component interactions to target emergent structure is fundamental to numerous applications in biotechnology, materials science, and statistical physics. Equally important is the inverse problem of designing emergent kinetics, but this has received considerably less attention. Using recent advances in automatic differentiation, we show how kinetic pathways can be precisely designed by directly differentiating through statistical physics models, namely free energy calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. We consider two systems that are crucial to our understanding of structural self-assembly: bulk crystallization and small nanoclusters. In each case, we are able to assemble precise dynamical features. Using gradient information, we manipulate interactions among constituent particles to tune the rate at which these systems yield specific structures of interest. Moreover, we use this approach to learn nontrivial features about the high-dimensional design space, allowing us to accurately predict when multiple kinetic features can be simultaneously and independently controlled. These results provide a concrete and generalizable foundation for studying nonstructural self-assembly, including kinetic properties as well as other complex emergent properties, in a vast array of systems
Break-junction tunneling measurements of the high-\u3ci\u3eT\u3c/i\u3e\u3csub\u3e\u3ci\u3ec\u3c/i\u3e\u3c/sub\u3e superconductor Y\u3csub\u3e1\u3c/sub\u3eBa\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3eCu\u3csub\u3e3\u3c/sub\u3eO\u3csub\u3e9- δ \u3c/sub\u3e
Current-voltage tunneling characteristics in a high-critical-temperature superconducting material containing predominately Y1Ba2Cu3O9- δ have been measured using the break-junction technique. Sharp gap structure was observed, with the largest superconductive energy gap measured to be Δ=19.5±1 meV, assuming a superconductor-insulator-superconductor junction. This energy gap corresponds to 2Δ/kBTc=4.8 at T=4 K, for a critical temperature of 93 K (midpoint of the resistive transition)
Resonance fluorescence in a waveguide geometry
We show how to calculate the first- and second-order statistics of the
scattered fields for an arbitrary intensity coherent state light field
interacting with a two-level system in a waveguide geometry. Specifically, we
calculate the resonance fluorescence from the qubit, using input-output
formalism. We derive the transmission and reflection coefficients, and
illustrate the bunching and anti-bunching of light that is scattered in the
forward and backward directions, respectively. Our results agree with previous
calculations on one- and two-photon scattering as well as those that are based
on the master equation approach.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures and supplementary material (Mathematica code).
This is the published version: typos are fixed, conclusion section is
expanded, references are update
Long-range nonlocal flow of vortices in narrow superconducting channels
We report a new nonlocal effect in vortex matter, where an electric current
confined to a small region of a long and sufficiently narrow superconducting
wire causes vortex flow at distances hundreds of inter-vortex separations away.
The observed remote traffic of vortices is attributed to a very efficient
transfer of a local strain through the one-dimensional vortex lattice, even in
the presence of disorder. We also observe mesoscopic fluctuations in the
nonlocal vortex flow, which arise due to "traffic jams" when vortex
arrangements do not match a local geometry of a superconducting channel.Comment: a slightly longer version of a tentatively accepted PR
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