2,186 research outputs found

    Recent Studies in Superconductivity at Extreme Pressures

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    Studies of the effect of high pressure on superconductivity began in 1925 with the seminal work of Sizoo and Onnes on Sn to 0.03 GPa and have continued up to the present day to pressures in the 200 - 300 GPa range. Such enormous pressures cause profound changes in all condensed matter properties, including superconductivity. In high pressure experiments metallic elements, Tc values have been elevated to temperatures as high as 20 K for Y at 115 GPa and 25 K for Ca at 160 GPa. These pressures are sufficient to turn many insulators into metals and magnetics into superconductors. The changes will be particularly dramatic when the pressure is sufficient to break up one or more atomic shells. Recent results in superconductivity to Mbar pressures wll be discussed which exemplify the progress made in this field over the past 82 years.Comment: Proceedings of the 21st AIRAPT and 45th EHPRG International Conference on High Pressure Science and Technology, Catania, Italy, Sept. 17-21, 200

    Gallai-Ramsey Number for Classes of Brooms

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    Given a graph GG, we consider the problem of finding the minimum number nn such that any kk edge colored complete graph on nn vertices contains either a rainbow colored triangle or a monochromatic copy of the graph GG, denoted grk(K3:G)gr_k(K_{3}:G). More precisely we consider G=Bm,â„“G=B_{m,\ell} where Bm,â„“B_{m,\ell} is a broom graph with mm representing the number of vertices on the handle and â„“\ell representing the number of bristle vertices. We develop a technique to reduce the difficulty of finding grk(K3:Bm,â„“)gr_{k}(K_{3}:B_{m,\ell}), and use the technique to prove a few cases with a fixed handle length, but arbitrarily many bristles. Further, we find upper and lower bounds for any broom

    Evolution of the Fermi surface of BiTeCl with pressure

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    We report measurements of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in the giant Rashba semiconductor BiTeCl under applied pressures up to ~2.5 GPa. We observe two distinct oscillation frequencies, corresponding to the Rashba-split inner and outer Fermi surfaces. BiTeCl has a conduction band bottom that is split into two sub-bands due to the strong Rashba coupling, resulting in two spin-polarized conduction bands as well as a Dirac point. Our results suggest that the chemical potential lies above this Dirac point, giving rise to two Fermi surfaces. We use a simple two-band model to understand the pressure dependence of our sample parameters. Comparing our results on BiTeCl to previous results on BiTeI, we observe similar trends in both the chemical potential and the Rashba splitting with pressure.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Pressure-induced Superconductivity in CaLi2

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    A search for superconductivity has been carried out on the hexagonal polymorph of Laves-phase CaLi2, a compound for which Feng, Ashcroft, and Hoffmann predict highly anomalous behavior under pressure. No superconductivity is observed above 1.10 K at ambient pressure. However, high-pressure ac susceptibility and electrical resistivity studies to 81 GPa reveal bulk superconductivity in CaLi2 at temperatures as high as 13 K. The normal-state resistivity shows a dramatic increase with pressure.Comment: bulk superconductivity in CaLi2 now confirme

    NASA-FAA helicopter Microwave Landing System curved path flight test

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    An ongoing series of joint NASA/FAA helicopter Microwave Landing System (MLS) flight tests was conducted at Ames Research Center. This paper deals with tests done from the spring through the fall of 1983. This flight test investigated and developed solutions to the problem of manually flying curved-path and steep glide slope approaches into the terminal area using the MLS and flight director guidance. An MLS-equipped Bell UH-1H helicopter flown by NASA test pilots was used to develop approaches and procedures for flying these approaches. The approaches took the form of Straight-in, U-turn, and S-turn flightpaths with glide slopes of 6 deg, 9 deg, and 12 deg. These procedures were evaluated by 18 pilots from various elements of the helicopter community, flying a total of 221 hooded instrument approaches. Flying these curved path and steep glide slopes was found to be operationally acceptable with flight director guidance using the MLS

    Studies of superconductivity and structure for CaC6 to pressures above 15 GPa

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    The dependence of the superconducting transition temperature Tc of CaC6 has been determined as a function of hydrostatic pressure in both helium-loaded gas and diamond-anvil cells to 0.6 and 32 GPa, respectively. Following an initial increase at the rate +0.39(1) K/GPa, Tc drops abruptly from 15 K to 4 K at 10 GPa. Synchrotron x-ray measurements to 15 GPa point to a structural transition near 10 GPa from a rhombohedral to a higher symmetry phase
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