4,940 research outputs found
Magnetotransport in the low carrier density ferromagnet EuB_6
We present a magnetotransport study of the low--carrier density ferromagnet
EuB_6. This semimetallic compound, which undergoes two ferromagnetic
transitions at T_l = 15.3 K and T_c = 12.5 K, exhibits close to T_l a colossal
magnetoresistivity (CMR). We quantitatively compare our data to recent
theoretical work, which however fails to explain our observations. We attribute
this disagreement with theory to the unique type of magnetic polaron formation
in EuB_6.Comment: Conference contribution MMM'99, San Jos
Radial gradients and anisotropies of cosmic rays in the interplanetary medium
Radial gradients and anisotropies of cosmic rays in interplanetary mediu
Magnetic measurements at pressures above 10 GPa in a miniature ceramic anvil cell for a superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer
A miniature ceramic anvil high pressure cell (mCAC) was earlier designed by
us for magnetic measurements at pressures up to 7.6 GPa in a commercial
superconducting quantum interference (SQUID) magnetometer [N. Tateiwa et al.,
Rev. Sci. Instrum. 82, 053906 (2011)]. Here, we describe methods to generate
pressures above 10 GPa in the mCAC. The efficiency of the pressure generation
is sharply improved when the Cu-Be gasket is sufficiently preindented. The
maximum pressure for the 0.6 mm culet anvils is 12.6 GPa when the Cu-Be gasket
is preindented from the initial thickness of 0.30 to 0.06 mm. The 0.5 mm culet
anvils were also tested with a rhenium gasket. The maximum pressure attainable
in the mCAC is about 13 GPa. The present cell was used to study YbCu2Si2 which
shows a pressure induced transition from the non-magnetic to magnetic phases at
8 GPa. We confirm a ferromagnetic transition from the dc magnetization
measurement at high pressure. The mCAC can detect the ferromagnetic ordered
state whose spontaneous magnetic moment is smaller than 1 mB per unit cell. The
high sensitivity for magnetic measurements in the mCAC may result from the the
simplicity of cell structure. The present study shows the availability of the
mCAC for precise magnetic measurements at pressures above 10 GPa
A New Heavy-Fermion Superconductor CeIrIn5: Relative of the Cuprates?
CeIrIn5 is a member of a new family of heavy-fermion compounds and has a
Sommerfeld specific heat coefficient of 720 mJ/mol-K2. It exhibits a bulk,
thermodynamic transition to a superconducting state at Tc=0.40 K, below which
the specific heat decreases as T2 to a small residual T-linear value.
Surprisingly, the electrical resistivity drops below instrumental resolution at
a much higher temperature T0=1.2 K. These behaviors are highly reproducible and
field-dependent studies indicate that T0 and Tc arise from the same underlying
electronic structure. The layered crystal structure of CeIrIn5 suggests a
possible analogy to the cuprates in which spin/charge pair correlations develop
well above Tc
Aquatic Animal Health Training Scheme. Fish disease diagnosis, biosecurity & disease management training for fish farming industry of Australia.
This workshop delivered new knowledge and technical skills with hands-on training to 24 participants representing of Australian fish-farming and government veterinarian sectors. The workshop focused on delivering training in both theory and practical aspects, with delivering hands-on technical skills, relating directly to fish disease detection, diagnosis, treatment, control, disease emergency response, disease reporting, fish health certification, fish toxicology and fish kills. The workshop was held in Townsville, Queensland on July 17th-18th, 2015, and was organized and delivered by Dr Rachel Bowater, Mr Andrew Fisk, Dr Kitman Dyrting, Dr Ian Anderson and Dr Roger Chong, with whom collectively have >100 years of experience in fish diagnostics, research, pathology, policy and aquaculture extension
Distinct order of Gd 4f and Fe 3d moments coexisting in GdFe4Al8
Single crystals of flux-grown tetragonal GdFe4Al8 were characterized by
thermodynamic, transport, and x-ray resonant magnetic scattering measurements.
In addition to antiferromagnetic order at TN ~ 155 K, two low-temperature
transitions at T1 ~ 21 K and T2 ~ 27 K were identified. The Fe moments order at
TN with an incommensurate propagation vector (tau,tau,0) with tau varying
between 0.06 and 0.14 as a function of temperature, and maintain this order
over the entire T<TN range. The Gd 4f moments order below T2 with a
ferromagnetic component mainly out of plane. Below T1, the ferromagnetic
components are confined to the crystallographic plane. Remarkably, at low
temperatures the Fe moments maintain the same modulation as at high
temperatures, but the Gd 4f moments apparently do not follow this modulation.
The magnetic phase diagrams for fields applied in [110] and [001] direction are
presented and possible magnetic structures are discussed.Comment: v2: 14 pages, 12 figures; PRB in prin
Electron transport, penetration depth and upper critical magnetic field of ZrB12 and MgB2
We report on the synthesis and measurements of the temperature dependence of
resistivity, R(T), the penetration depth, l(T), and upper critical magnetic
field, Hc2(T), for polycrystalline samples of dodecaboride ZrB12 and diboride
MgB2. We conclude that ZrB12 as well as MgB2 behave like simple metals in the
normal state with usual Bloch-Gruneisen temperature dependence of resistivity
and with rather low resistive Debye temperature, TR=280 K, for ZrB12 (as
compared to MgB2 with TR=900 K). The R(T) and l(T) dependencies of ZrB12 reveal
a superconducting transition at Tc=6.0 K. Although a clear exponential
l(T)dependence in MgB2 thin films and ceramic pellets was observed at low
temperatures, this dependence was almost linear for ZrB12 below Tc/2. These
features indicate s-wave pairing state in MgB2, whereas a d-wave pairing state
is possible in ZrB12. A fit to the data gives a reduced energy gap
2D(0)/kTc=1.6 for MgB2 films and pellets, in good agreement with published data
for 3D \pi - sheets of the Fermi surface. Contrary to conventional theories we
found a linear temperature dependence of Hc2(T) for ZrB12 (Hc2(0)=0.15 T).Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, submitted to JET
Surface electronic structure of a topological Kondo insulator candidate SmB6: insights from high-resolution ARPES
The Kondo insulator SmB6 has long been known to exhibit low temperature (T <
10K) transport anomaly and has recently attracted attention as a new
topological insulator candidate. By combining low-temperature and high
energy-momentum resolution of the laser-based ARPES technique, for the first
time, we probe the surface electronic structure of the anomalous conductivity
regime. We observe that the bulk bands exhibit a Kondo gap of 14 meV and
identify in-gap low-lying states within a 4 meV window of the Fermi level on
the (001)-surface of this material. The low-lying states are found to form
electron-like Fermi surface pockets that enclose the X and the Gamma points of
the surface Brillouin zone. These states disappear as temperature is raised
above 15K in correspondence with the complete disappearance of the 2D
conductivity channels in SmB6. While the topological nature of the in-gap
metallic states cannot be ascertained without spin (spin-texture) measurements
our bulk and surface measurements carried out in the
transport-anomaly-temperature regime (T < 10K) are consistent with the
first-principle predicted Fermi surface behavior of a topological Kondo
insulator phase in this material.Comment: 4 Figures, 6 Page
Magnetic Structure of Rapidly Rotating FK Comae-Type Coronae
We present a three-dimensional simulation of the corona of an FK Com-type
rapidly rotating G giant using a magnetohydrodynamic model that was originally
developed for the solar corona in order to capture the more realistic,
non-potential coronal structure. We drive the simulation with surface maps for
the radial magnetic field obtained from a stellar dynamo model of the FK Com
system. This enables us to obtain the coronal structure for different field
topologies representing different periods of time. We find that the corona of
such an FK Com-like star, including the large scale coronal loops, is dominated
by a strong toroidal component of the magnetic field. This is a result of part
of the field being dragged by the radial outflow, while the other part remains
attached to the rapidly rotating stellar surface. This tangling of the magnetic
field,in addition to a reduction in the radial flow component, leads to a
flattening of the gas density profile with distance in the inner part of the
corona. The three-dimensional simulation provides a global view of the coronal
structure. Some aspects of the results, such as the toroidal wrapping of the
magnetic field, should also be applicable to coronae on fast rotators in
general, which our study shows can be considerably different from the
well-studied and well-observed solar corona. Studying the global structure of
such coronae should also lead to a better understanding of their related
stellar processes, such as flares and coronal mass ejections, and in
particular, should lead to an improved understanding of mass and angular
momentum loss from such systems.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 10 pages, 6 figure
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