2,189 research outputs found
Electron-ion recombination of Si IV forming Si III: Storage-ring measurement and multiconfiguration Dirac-Fock calculations
The electron-ion recombination rate coefficient for Si IV forming Si III was
measured at the heavy-ion storage-ring TSR. The experimental electron-ion
collision energy range of 0-186 eV encompassed the 2p(6) nl n'l' dielectronic
recombination (DR) resonances associated with 3s to nl core excitations, 2s
2p(6) 3s nl n'l' resonances associated with 2s to nl (n=3,4) core excitations,
and 2p(5) 3s nl n'l' resonances associated with 2p to nl (n=3,...,infinity)
core excitations. The experimental DR results are compared with theoretical
calculations using the multiconfiguration Dirac-Fock (MCDF) method for DR via
the 3s to 3p n'l' and 3s to 3d n'l' (both n'=3,...,6) and 2p(5) 3s 3l n'l'
(n'=3,4) capture channels. Finally, the experimental and theoretical plasma DR
rate coefficients for Si IV forming Si III are derived and compared with
previously available results.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review
Reverse-domain superconductivity in superconductor-ferromagnet hybrids: effect of a vortex-free channel on the symmetry of I-V characteristics
We demonstrate experimentally that the presence of a single domain wall in an
underlying ferromagnetic BaFe_{12}O_{19} substrate can induce a considerable
asymmetry in the current (I) - voltage (V) characteristics of a superconducting
Al bridge. The observed diode-like effect, i.e. polarity-dependent critical
current, is associated with the formation of a vortex-free channel inside the
superconducting area which increases the total current flowing through the
superconducting bridge without dissipation. The vortex-free region appears only
for a certain sign of the injected current and for a limited range of the
external magnetic field
Buchbesprechungen / Book Reviews
Lüdecke, C., Fritzsche, D., Dullo, C., Thiede, J., Salewski, C. (2016): Book Reviews. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 176: 224-225, DOI: 10.2312/polarforschung.86.1.72, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/polarforschung.86.1.7
Crossover between different regimes of inhomogeneous superconductivity in planar superconductor-ferromagnet hybrids
We studied experimentally the effect of a stripe-like domain structure in a
ferromagnetic BaFe_{12}O_{19} substrate on the magnetoresistance of a
superconducting Pb microbridge. The system was designed in such a way that the
bridge is oriented perpendicular to the domain walls. It is demonstrated that
depending on the ratio between the amplitude of the nonuniform magnetic field
B_0, induced by the ferromagnet, and the upper critical field H_{c2} of the
superconducting material, the regions of the reverse-domain superconductivity
in the H-T plane can be isolated or can overlap (H is the external magnetic
field, T is temperature). The latter case corresponds to the condition
B_0/H_{c2}<1 and results in the formation of superconductivity above the
magnetic domains of both polarities. We discovered the regime of edge-assisted
reverse-domain superconductivity, corresponding to localized superconductivity
near the edges of the bridge above the compensated magnetic domains. Direct
verification of the formation of inhomogeneous superconducting states and
external-field-controlled switching between normal state and inhomogeneous
superconductivity were obtained by low-temperature scanning laser microscopy.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
Classical analogy for the deflection of flux avalanches by a metallic layer
Sudden avalanches of magnetic flux bursting into a superconducting sample
undergo deflections of their trajectories when encountering a conductive layer
deposited on top of the superconductor. Remarkably, in some cases flux is
totally excluded from the area covered by the conductive layer. We present a
simple classical model that accounts for this behaviour and considers a
magnetic monopole approaching a semi-infinite conductive plane. This model
suggests that magnetic braking is an important mechanism responsible for
avalanche deflection.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Hairpins in the conformations of a confined polymer
If a semiflexible polymer confined to a narrow channel bends around by 180
degrees, the polymer is said to exhibit a hairpin. The equilibrium extension
statistics of the confined polymer are well understood when hairpins are
vanishingly rare or when they are plentiful. Here we analyze the extension
statistics in the intermediate situation via experiments with DNA coated by the
protein RecA, which enhances the stiffness of the DNA molecule by approximately
one order of magnitude. We find that the extension distribution is highly
non-Gaussian, in good agreement with Monte Carlo simulations of confined
discrete wormlike chains. We develop a simple model that qualitatively explains
the form of the extension distribution. The model shows that the tail of the
distribution at short extensions is determined by conformations with one
hairpin.Comment: Revised version. 22 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, supplementary
materia
The local adsorption structure of benzene on Si(001)-(2 × 1): a photoelectron diffraction investigation
Scanned-energy mode C 1s photoelectron diffraction has been used to investigate the local adsorption geometry of benzene on Si(001) at saturation coverage and room temperature. The results show that two different local bonding geometries coexist, namely the 'standard butterfly' (SB) and 'tilted bridge' (TB) forms, with a composition of 58 ± 29% of the SB species. Detailed structural parameter values are presented for both species including Si–C bond lengths. On the basis of published measurements of the rate of conversion of the SB to the TB form on this surface, we estimate that the timescale of our experiment is sufficient for achieving equilibrium, and in this case our results indicate that the difference in the Gibbs free energy of adsorption, ΔG(TB)−ΔG(SB), is in the range −0.023 to +0.049 eV. We suggest, however, that the relative concentration of the two species may also be influenced by a combination of steric effects influencing the kinetics, and a sensitivity of the adsorption energies of the adsorbed SB and TB forms to the nature of the surrounding benzene molecules
Element-Specific Depth Profile of Magnetism and Stoichiometry at the La0.67Sr0.33MnO3/BiFeO3 Interface
Depth-sensitive magnetic, structural and chemical characterization is
important in the understanding and optimization of novel physical phenomena
emerging at interfaces of transition metal oxide heterostructures. In a
simultaneous approach we have used polarized neutron and resonant X-ray
reflectometry to determine the magnetic profile across atomically sharp
interfaces of ferromagnetic La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 / multiferroic BiFeO3 bi-layers
with sub-nanometer resolution. In particular, the X-ray resonant magnetic
reflectivity measurements at the Fe and Mn resonance edges allowed us to
determine the element specific depth profile of the ferromagnetic moments in
both the La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 and BiFeO3 layers. Our measurements indicate a
magnetically diluted interface layer within the La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 layer, in
contrast to previous observations on inversely deposited layers. Additional
resonant X-ray reflection measurements indicate a region of an altered Mn- and
O-content at the interface, with a thickness matching that of the magnetic
diluted layer, as origin of the reduction of the magnetic moment.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, supplemental material include
Measuring Charge Transport in an Amorphous Semiconductor Using Charge Sensing
We measure charge transport in hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) using
a nanometer scale silicon MOSFET as a charge sensor. This charge detection
technique makes possible the measurement of extremely large resistances. At
high temperatures, where the a-Si:H resistance is not too large, the charge
detection measurement agrees with a direct measurement of current. The device
geometry allows us to probe both the field effect and dispersive transport in
the a-Si:H using charge sensing and to extract the density of states near the
Fermi energy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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