23,348 research outputs found
Heterogeneous spin state in the field-induced phase of volborthite as seen via 51V nuclear magnetic resonance
We report results of 51V NMR in the field-induced phase of volborthite
Cu3V2O7(OH)dot2H2O, a spin-1/2 antiferromagnet on a distorted kagome lattice.
In magnetic fields above 4.5 T, two types of V sites with different spin-echo
decay rates are observed. The hyperfine field at the fast decaying sites has a
distribution, while it is more homogeneous at the slowly decaying sites. Our
results indicate a heterogeneous state consisting of two spatially alternating
Cu spin systems, one of which exhibits anomalous spin fluctuations contrasting
with the other showing a conventional static order.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Tuning the spin dynamics of kagome systems
Despite the conceptional importance of realizing spin liquids in solid states
only few compounds are known. On the other side the effect of lattice
distortions and anisotropies on the magnetic exchange topology and the
fluctuation spectrum are an interesting problem. We compare the excitation
spectra of the two s=1/2 kagome lattice compounds volborthite and vesignieite
using Raman scattering. We demonstrate that even small modifications of the
crystal structure may have a huge effect on the phonon spectrum and low
temperature properties.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
Ag and N acceptors in ZnO: ab initio study of acceptor pairing, doping efficiency, and the role of hydrogen
Efficiency of ZnO doping with Ag and N shallow acceptors, which substitute
respectively cations and anions, was investigated. First principles
calculations indicate a strong tendency towards formation of nearest neighbor
Ag-N pairs and N-Ag-N triangles. Binding of acceptors stems from the formation
of quasi-molecular bonds between dopants, and has a universal character in
semiconductors. The pairing increases energy levels of impurities, and thus
lowers doping efficiency. In the presence of donors, pairing is weaker or even
forbidden. However, hydrogen has a tendency to form clusters with Ag and N,
which favors the Ag-N aggregation and lowers the acceptor levels of such
complexes.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
A Necessary Condition for existence of Lie Symmetries in Quasihomogeneous Systems of Ordinary Differential Equations
Lie symmetries for ordinary differential equations are studied. In systems of
ordinary differential equations, there do not always exist non-trivial Lie
symmetries around equilibrium points. We present a necessary condition for
existence of Lie symmetries analytic in the neighbourhood of an equilibrium
point. In addition, this result can be applied to a necessary condition for
existence of a Lie symmetry in quasihomogeneous systems of ordinary
differential equations. With the help of our main theorem, it is proved that
several systems do not possess any analytic Lie symmetries.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, AMSLaTe
Supernova Explosions in the Early Universe: Evolution of Radiative Remnants and the Halo Destruction Efficiency
We study the evolution of supernova (SN) remnants of the first stars, taking
proper account of the radiative feedback of the progenitor stars on the
surroundings. We carry out a series of one-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations
with radiative cooling, starting from initial configurations that are drawn
from the results of our earlier radiation hydrodynamic simulations of the first
HII regions. In low-mass (< 10^6 M_sun) halos, the stellar radiation
significantly reduces the ambient gas density prior to the SN explosion. The
blastwave quickly propagates over the halo's virial radius, leading to complete
evacuation of the gas even with the input energy of 10^50 erg. We find that a
large fraction of the remnant's thermal energy is lost in 0.1-10 Myr by line
cooling, whereas, for larger explosion energies, the remnant expands even more
rapidly with decreasing interior density, and cools predominantly via inverse
Compton process. In higher mass halos, the gas density near the explosion site
remains high and the SN shock is heavily confined; the thermal energy of the
remnant is quickly radiated away by free-free emission, even if the total input
energy exceeds the binding energy of halos by two orders of magnitude. We show
that the efficiency of halo destruction is determined not only by the explosion
energy but also by the gas density profile, and thus controlled by radiative
feedback prior to the explosion. Several implications of our results for the
formation of first quasars and second-generation stars in the universe are also
discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 11 embedded figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Formation of Massive Primordial Stars in a Reionized Gas
We use cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with unprecedented resolution to
study the formation of primordial stars in an ionized gas at high redshifts.
Our approach includes all the relevant atomic and molecular physics to follow
the thermal evolution of a prestellar gas cloud to very high densities of
~10^{18} cm^{-3}. We locate a star-forming gas cloud within a reionized region
in our cosmological simulation. The first run-away collapse is triggered when
the gas cloud's mass is ~40 Msun. We show that the cloud core remains stable
against chemo-thermal instability and also against gravitational deformation
throughout its evolution. Consequently, a single proto-stellar seed is formed,
which accretes the surrounding hot gas at the rate ~10^{-3} Msun/year. We carry
out proto-stellar evolution calculations using the inferred accretion rate. The
resulting mass of the star when it reaches the zero-age main sequence is M_ZAMS
~40 Msun. We argue that, since the obtained M_ZAMS is as large as the mass of
the collapsing parent cloud, the final stellar mass should be close to this
value. Such massive, rather than exceptionally massive, primordial stars are
expected to cause early chemical enrichment of the Universe by exploding as
black hole-forming super/hypernovae, and may also be progenitors of high
redshift gamma-ray bursts. The elemental abundance patterns of recently
discovered hyper metal-poor stars suggest that they might have been born from
the interstellar medium that was metal-enriched by supernovae of these massive
primordial stars.Comment: Revised version. To appear in ApJ
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