5,165 research outputs found
Characterization of low-energy magnetic excitations in chromium
The low-energy excitations of Cr, i.e. the Fincher-Burke (FB) modes, have
been investigated in the transversely polarized spin-density-wave phase by
inelastic neutron scattering using a single-(Q+-) crystal with a propagation
vector (Q+-) parallel to [0,0,1]. The constant-momentum-transfer scans show
that the energy spectra consist of two components, namely dispersive FB modes
and an almost energy-independent cross section. Most remarkably, we find that
the spectrum of the FB modes exhibits one peak at 140 K near Q = (0,0,0.98) and
two peaks near Q = (0,0,1.02), respectively. This is surprising because Cr
crystallizes in a centro-symmetric bcc structure. The asymmetry of those energy
spectra decreases with increasing temperature. In addition, the observed
magnetic peak intensity is independent of Q suggesting a transfer of
spectral-weight between the upper and lower FB modes. The energy-independent
cross section is localized only between the incommensurate peaks and develops
rapidly with increasing temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
The role of quasi-momentum in the resonant dynamics of the atom-optics kicked rotor
We examine the effect of the initial atomic momentum distribution on the
dynamics of the atom-optical realisation of the quantum kicked rotor. The atoms
are kicked by a pulsed optical lattice, the periodicity of which implies that
quasi-momentum is conserved in the transport problem. We study and compare
experimentally and theoretically two resonant limits of the kicked rotor: in
the vicinity of the quantum resonances and in the semiclassical limit of
vanishing kicking period. It is found that for the same experimental
distribution of quasi-momenta, significant deviations from the kicked rotor
model are induced close to quantum resonance, while close to the classical
resonance (i.e. for small kicking period) the effect of the quasi-momentum
vanishes.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, to be published in J. Phys. A, Special Issue on
'Trends in Quantum Chaotic Scattering
Short-Range Ordered Phase of the Double-Exchange Model in Infinite Dimensions
Using dynamical mean-field theory, we have evaluated the magnetic
instabilities and T=0 phase diagram of the double-exchange model on a Bethe
lattice in infinite dimensions. In addition to ferromagnetic (FM) and
antiferromagnetic (AF) phases, we also study a class of disordered phases with
magnetic short-range order (SRO). In the weak-coupling limit, a SRO phase has a
higher transition temperature than the AF phase for all fillings p below 1 and
can even have a higher transition temperature than the FM phase. At T=0 and for
small Hund's coupling J_H, a SRO state has lower energy than either the FM or
AF phases for 0.26\le p 0 limit
but appears for any non-zero value of J_H.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, published versio
On the Spectrum of the Resonant Quantum Kicked Rotor
It is proven that none of the bands in the quasi-energy spectrum of the
Quantum Kicked Rotor is flat at any primitive resonance of any order.
Perturbative estimates of bandwidths at small kick strength are established for
the case of primitive resonances of prime order. Different bands scale with
different powers of the kick strength, due to degeneracies in the spectrum of
the free rotor.Comment: Description of related published work has been expanded in the
Introductio
Energy transfer in binary collisions of two gyrating charged particles in a magnetic field
Binary collisions of the gyrating charged particles in an external magnetic
field are considered within a classical second-order perturbation theory, i.e.,
up to contributions which are quadratic in the binary interaction, starting
from the unperturbed helical motion of the particles. The calculations are done
with the help of a binary collisions treatment which is valid for any strength
of the magnetic field and involves all harmonics of the particles cyclotron
motion. The energy transfer is explicitly calculated for a regularized and
screened potential which is both of finite range and nonsingular at the origin.
The validity of the perturbation treatment is evaluated by comparing with
classical trajectory Monte Carlo (CTMC) calculations which also allow to
investigate the strong collisions with large energy and velocity transfer at
low velocities. For large initial velocities on the other hand, only small
velocity transfers occur. There the nonperturbative numerical CTMC results
agree excellently with the predictions of the perturbative treatment.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Polymers for spacecraft hardware materials specifications and engineering information Monthly technical progress report no. 18, Nov. 10 - Dec. 9, 1965
Chemical test procedures for analyzing potting compound bases for spacecraft construction material
Polymers for spacecraft hardware materials specifications and engineering information Monthly technical progress report no. 19, Dec. 10, 1965 - Jan. 9, 1966
Thermal vacuum weight loss determinations of polymers for spacecraft construction material application
Spin Diffusion in Double-Exchange Manganites
The theoretical study of spin diffusion in double-exchange magnets by means
of dynamical mean-field theory is presented. We demonstrate that the
spin-diffusion coefficient becomes independent of the Hund's coupling JH in the
range of parameters JH*S >> W >> T, W being the bandwidth, relevant to colossal
magnetoresistive manganites in the metallic part of their phase diagram. Our
study reveals a close correspondence as well as some counterintuitive
differences between the results on Bethe and hypercubic lattices. Our results
are in accord with neutron scattering data and with previous theoretical work
for high temperatures.Comment: 4.0 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX 4, replaced with the published versio
Stable Quantum Resonances in Atom Optics
A theory for stabilization of quantum resonances by a mechanism similar to
one leading to classical resonances in nonlinear systems is presented. It
explains recent surprising experimental results, obtained for cold Cesium atoms
when driven in the presence of gravity, and leads to further predictions. The
theory makes use of invariance properties of the system, that are similar to
those of solids, allowing for separation into independent kicked rotor
problems. The analysis relies on a fictitious classical limit where the small
parameter is {\em not} Planck's constant, but rather the detuning from the
frequency that is resonant in absence of gravity.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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