34,498 research outputs found
Co-rich cobalt platinum nanowire arrays: effects of annealing
The effects of annealing on the crystal structure and magnetic properties of Co-rich cobalt platinum nanowire arrays embedded in anodic aluminium oxide membranes have been investigated. For this purpose, a rapid thermal annealing to temperatures of 300 °C to 800 °C has been used. Transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy show that the nanowires have a mean diameter of 14 nm and an estimated wire density of 7.8×1010 cm-2. From x-ray diffraction patterns, we find that the nanowires are hcp and possess a preferred texture in which the c axis of the grains tends to lie along the major axis of the wire. Vibrating sample magnetometry measurements indicate that the easy axis is along the nanowire axis direction. Hysteresis loops, saturation magnetization, squareness ratio (Mr/Ms), and coercivity (perpendicular and parallel to the nanowire axis) have all been investigated as a function of the annealing temperature (TA). Coercivity parallel to the wire axis first increases with TA, attains a maximum at 600 °C (which is 150% of the as-deposited sample), and then decreases. By contrast there is relatively little change in the coercivity measured perpendicular to the wires. The saturation magnetization for the as-deposited sample is 1360 emu/cc and remains almost constant for annealing temperatures up to 500 °C: for TA>500 °C it decreases significantly. The maximum (Mr/Ms) ratio attained in this study is 0.99, the highest value reported thus far for cobalt platinum alloy nanowires. The data suggest that these materials are potential candidates for high-density magnetic recording media
Horizon Entropy in Modified Gravity
We present an observation about the proposal that four-dimensional
modification of general relativity may explain the observed cosmic acceleration
today. Assuming that the thermodynamical nature of gravity theory continues to
hold in modified gravity theories, we derive the modified horizon entropy
formula from the modified Friedmann equation. We argue that our results imply
that there are conceptual problems in some models of four-dimensional
modification of general relativity.Comment: 8 pages. v2: references adde
An Invariance Principle of G-Brownian Motion for the Law of the Iterated Logarithm under G-expectation
The classical law of the iterated logarithm (LIL for short)as fundamental
limit theorems in probability theory play an important role in the development
of probability theory and its applications. Strassen (1964) extended LIL to
large classes of functional random variables, it is well known as the
invariance principle for LIL which provide an extremely powerful tool in
probability and statistical inference. But recently many phenomena show that
the linearity of probability is a limit for applications, for example in
finance, statistics. As while a nonlinear expectation--- G-expectation has
attracted extensive attentions of mathematicians and economists, more and more
people began to study the nature of the G-expectation space. A natural question
is: Can the classical invariance principle for LIL be generalized under
G-expectation space? This paper gives a positive answer. We present the
invariance principle of G-Brownian motion for the law of the iterated logarithm
under G-expectation
Spin and Charge Structure of the Surface States in Topological Insulators
We investigate the spin and charge densities of surface states of the
three-dimensional topological insulator , starting from the continuum
description of the material [Zhang {\em et al.}, Nat. Phys. 5, 438 (2009)]. The
spin structure on surfaces other than the 111 surface has additional complexity
because of a misalignment of the contributions coming from the two sublattices
of the crystal. For these surfaces we expect new features to be seen in the
spin-resolved ARPES experiments, caused by a non-helical spin-polarization of
electrons at the individual sublattices as well as by the interference of the
electron waves emitted coherently from two sublattices. We also show that the
position of the Dirac crossing in spectrum of surface states depends on the
orientation of the interface. This leads to contact potentials and surface
charge redistribution at edges between different facets of the crystal.Comment: Use the correct spin operator. Changes affect the surface states spin
structure, but not the spectru
Graphitic-BN Based Metal-free Molecular Magnets From A First Principle Study
We perform a first principle calculation on the electronic properties of
carbon doped graphitic boron nitride graphitic BN. It was found that carbon
substitution for either boron or nitrogen atom in graphitic BN can induce
spontaneous magnetization. Calculations based on density functional theory with
the local spin density approximation on the electronic band structure revealed
a spin polarized, dispersionless band near the Fermi energy. Spin density
contours showed that the magnetization density originates from the carbon atom.
The magnetization can be attributed to the carbon 2p electron. Charge density
distribution shows that the carbon atom forms covalent bonds with its three
nearest neighbourhood. The spontaneous magnetization survives the curvature
effect in BN nanotubes, suggesting the possibility of molecular magnets made
from BN. Compared to other theoretical models of light-element or metal-free
magnetic materials, the carbon-doped BN are more experimentally accessible and
can be potentially useful.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Strain Modulated Electronic Properties of Ge Nanowires - A First Principles Study
We used density-functional theory based first principles simulations to study
the effects of uniaxial strain and quantum confinement on the electronic
properties of germanium nanowires along the [110] direction, such as the energy
gap and the effective masses of the electron and hole. The diameters of the
nanowires being studied are up to 50 {\AA}. As shown in our calculations, the
Ge [110] nanowires possess a direct band gap, in contrast to the nature of an
indirect band gap in bulk. We discovered that the band gap and the effective
masses of charge carries can be modulated by applying uniaxial strain to the
nanowires. These strain modulations are size-dependent. For a smaller wire (~
12 {\AA}), the band gap is almost a linear function of strain; compressive
strain increases the gap while tensile strain reduces the gap. For a larger
wire (20 {\AA} - 50 {\AA}), the variation of the band gap with respect to
strain shows nearly parabolic behavior: compressive strain beyond -1% also
reduces the gap. In addition, our studies showed that strain affects effective
masses of the electron and hole very differently. The effective mass of the
hole increases with a tensile strain while the effective mass of the electron
increases with a compressive strain. Our results suggested both strain and size
can be used to tune the band structures of nanowires, which may help in design
of future nano-electronic devices. We also discussed our results by applying
the tight-binding model.Comment: 1 table, 8 figure
Random solids and random solidification: What can be learned by exploring systems obeying permanent random constraints?
In many interesting physical settings, such as the vulcanization of rubber,
the introduction of permanent random constraints between the constituents of a
homogeneous fluid can cause a phase transition to a random solid state. In this
random solid state, particles are permanently but randomly localized in space,
and a rigidity to shear deformations emerges. Owing to the permanence of the
random constraints, this phase transition is an equilibrium transition, which
confers on it a simplicity (at least relative to the conventional glass
transition) in the sense that it is amenable to established techniques of
equilibrium statistical mechanics. In this Paper I shall review recent
developments in the theory of random solidification for systems obeying
permanent random constraints, with the aim of bringing to the fore the
similarities and differences between such systems and those exhibiting the
conventional glass transition. I shall also report new results, obtained in
collaboration with Weiqun Peng, on equilibrium correlations and
susceptibilities that signal the approach of the random solidification
transition, discussing the physical interpretation and values of these
quantities both at the Gaussian level of approximation and, via a
renormalization-group approach, beyond.Comment: Paper presented at the "Unifying Concepts in Glass Physics" workshop,
International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy (September
15-18, 1999
The Kagome Antiferromagnet: A Schwinger-Boson Mean-Field Theory Study
The Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the Kagom\'{e} lattice is studied in the
framework of Schwinger-boson mean-field theory. Two solutions with different
symmetries are presented. One solution gives a conventional quantum state with
order for all spin values. Another gives a gapped spin liquid
state for spin and a mixed state with both and
orders for spin . We emphasize that the mixed
state exhibits two sets of peaks in the static spin structure factor. And for
the case of spin , the gap value we obtained is consistent with the
previous numerical calculations by other means. We also discuss the
thermodynamic quantities such as the specific heat and magnetic susceptibility
at low temperatures and show that our result is in a good agreement with the
Mermin-Wagner theorem.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
MSAT-X electronically steered phased array antenna system
A low profile electronically steered phased array was successfully developed for the Mobile Satellite Experiment Program (MSAT-X). The newly invented cavity-backed printed crossed-slot was used as the radiating element. The choice of this element was based on its low elevation angle gain coverage and low profile. A nineteen-way radial type unequal power divider and eighteen three-bit diode phase shifters constitute the beamformer module which is used to scan the beams electronically. A complete hybrid mode pointing system was also developed. The major features of the antenna system are broad coverage, low profile, and fast acquisition and tracking performance, even under fading conditions. Excellent intersatellite isolation (better than 26 dB) was realized, which will provide good quality mobile satellite communication in the future
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