22,089 research outputs found
High field superconducting phase diagrams including Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov vortex states
Motivated by a striking observation of a Fulde-Ferell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov
(FFLO) vortex state in the heavy fermion material CeCoIn5 in fields {\it
perpendicular} to the superconducting planes (),
superconducting phase diagrams including an FFLO state of quasi two-dimensional
(Q2D) superconductors are systematically studied. In the clean {\it limit}, the
high field superconducting state in the low temperature limit should be not the
FFLO state modulating along , appeared in CeCoIn5 in both and , but a different vortex state with a
modulation, induced by the paramagnetism, perpendicular to the field. It is
found that the presence of weak impurities is the origin of the absence in
CeCoIn5 of the latter state and leads to the phase
diagram, as seen in CeCoIn5, {\it apparently} different in character from that
in .Comment: A reference was updated. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Giant tunnel magnetoresistance and high annealing stability in CoFeB/MgO/CoFeB magnetic tunnel junctions with synthetic pinned layer
We investigated the relationship between tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio
and the crystallization of CoFeB layers through annealing in magnetic tunnel
junctions (MTJs) with MgO barriers that had CoFe/Ru/CoFeB synthetic ferrimagnet
pinned layers with varying Ru spacer thickness (tRu). The TMR ratio increased
with increasing annealing temperature (Ta) and tRu, reaching 361% at Ta = 425C,
whereas the TMR ratio of the MTJs with pinned layers without Ru spacers
decreased at Ta over 325C. Ruthenium spacers play an important role in forming
an (001)-oriented bcc CoFeB pinned layer, resulting in a high TMR ratio through
annealing at high temperatures.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Josephson Vortex States in Intermediate Fields
Motivated by recent resistance data in high superconductors in fields
{\it parallel} to the CuO layers, we address two issues on the Josephson-vortex
phase diagram, the appearances of structural transitions on the observed first
order transition (FOT) curve in intermediate fields and of a lower critical
point of the FOT line. It is found that some rotated pinned solids are more
stable than the ordinary rhombic pinned solids with vacant interlayer spacings
and that, due to the vertical portion in higher fields of the FOT line, the FOT
tends to be destroyed by creating a lower critical point.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. To appear in J.Phys.Soc.Jpn. 71, No.2 (February,
2002
Zone Leveling Crystal Growth of Thermoelectric PbTe Alloys with Sb_(2)Te_3 Widmanstätten Precipitates
Unidirectional solidification of PbTe-rich alloys in the pseudobinary PbTe-Sb_(2)Te_3 system using the zone leveling technique enables the production of large regions of homogeneous solid solutions for the formation of precipitate nanocomposites as compared with Bridgman solidification. (PbTe)_(0.940)(Sb_(2)Te_3)_(0.060) and (PbTe)_(0.952)(Sb_(2)Te_3)_(0.048) alloys were successfully grown using (PbTe)_(0.4)(Sb_(2)Te_3)_(0.6) and (PbTe)_(0.461)(Sb_(2)Te_3)_(0.539) as seed alloys, respectively, with 1 mm h^(–1) withdrawal velocity. In the unidirectionally solidified regions of both alloys, Widmanstatten precipitates are formed due to the decrease in solubility of Sb_(2)Te_3 in PbTe. To determine the compositions of the seed alloys for the zone leveling experiments, the solute distribution in solidification in the PbTe-richer part of the pseudobinary PbTe-Sb_(2)Te_3 system has been examined from the concentration profiles in the samples unidirectionally solidified by the Bridgman method
Evidence regarding clinical use of microvolt T-wave alternans [Accuracy of microvolt T-wave alternans testing]
Background: Microvolt T-wave alternans (MTWA) testing in many studies has proven to be a highly accurate predictor of ventricular tachyarrhythmic events (VTEs) in patients with risk factors for sudden cardiac death (SCD) but without a prior history of sustained VTEs (primary prevention patients). In some recent studies involving primary prevention patients with prophylactically implanted cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), MTWA has not performed as well.
Objective: This study examined the hypothesis that MTWA is an accurate predictor of VTEs in primary prevention patients without implanted ICDs, but not of appropriate ICD therapy in such patients with implanted ICDs.
Methods: This study identified prospective clinical trials evaluating MTWA measured using the spectral analytic method in primary prevention populations and analyzed studies in which: (1) few patients had implanted ICDs and as a result none or a small fraction (≤15%) of the reported end point VTEs were appropriate ICD therapies (low ICD group), or (2) many of the patients had implanted ICDs and the majority of the reported end point VTEs were appropriate ICD therapies (high ICD group).
Results: In the low ICD group comprising 3,682 patients, the hazard ratio associated with a nonnegative versus negative MTWA test was 13.6 (95% confidence interval [CI] 8.5 to 30.4) and the annual event rate among the MTWA-negative patients was 0.3% (95% CI: 0.1% to 0.5%). In contrast, in the high ICD group comprising 2,234 patients, the hazard ratio was only 1.6 (95% CI: 1.2 to 2.1) and the annual event rate among the MTWA-negative patients was elevated to 5.4% (95% CI: 4.1% to 6.7%). In support of these findings, we analyzed published data from the Multicenter Automatic Defibrillator Trial II (MADIT II) and Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT) trials and determined that in those trials only 32% of patients who received appropriate ICD therapy averted an SCD.
Conclusion: This study found that MTWA testing using the spectral analytic method provides an accurate means of predicting VTEs in primary prevention patients without implanted ICDs; in particular, the event rate is very low among such patients with a negative MTWA test. In prospective trials of ICD therapy, the number of patients receiving appropriate ICD therapy greatly exceeds the number of patients who avert SCD as a result of ICD therapy. In trials involving patients with implanted ICDs, these excess appropriate ICD therapies seem to distribute randomly between MTWA-negative and MTWA-nonnegative patients, obscuring the predictive accuracy of MTWA for SCD. Appropriate ICD therapy is an unreliable surrogate end point for SCD
On the generalized Freedman-Townsend model
Consistent interactions that can be added to a free, Abelian gauge theory
comprising a finite collection of BF models and a finite set of two-form gauge
fields (with the Lagrangian action written in first-order form as a sum of
Abelian Freedman-Townsend models) are constructed from the deformation of the
solution to the master equation based on specific cohomological techniques.
Under the hypotheses of smoothness in the coupling constant, locality, Lorentz
covariance, and Poincare invariance of the interactions, supplemented with the
requirement on the preservation of the number of derivatives on each field with
respect to the free theory, we obtain that the deformation procedure modifies
the Lagrangian action, the gauge transformations as well as the accompanying
algebra. The interacting Lagrangian action contains a generalized version of
non-Abelian Freedman-Townsend model. The consistency of interactions to all
orders in the coupling constant unfolds certain equations, which are shown to
have solutions.Comment: LaTeX, 62 page
An Alternative Topological Field Theory of Generalized Complex Geometry
We propose a new topological field theory on generalized complex geometry in
two dimension using AKSZ formulation. Zucchini's model is model in the case
that the generalized complex structuredepends on only a symplectic structure.
Our new model is model in the case that the generalized complex structure
depends on only a complex structure.Comment: 29 pages, typos and references correcte
Topological Field Theories and Geometry of Batalin-Vilkovisky Algebras
The algebraic and geometric structures of deformations are analyzed
concerning topological field theories of Schwarz type by means of the
Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism. Deformations of the Chern-Simons-BF theory in
three dimensions induces the Courant algebroid structure on the target space as
a sigma model. Deformations of BF theories in dimensions are also analyzed.
Two dimensional deformed BF theory induces the Poisson structure and three
dimensional deformed BF theory induces the Courant algebroid structure on the
target space as a sigma model. The deformations of BF theories in
dimensions induce the structures of Batalin-Vilkovisky algebras on the target
space.Comment: 25 page
Mode-Coupling Theory as a Mean-Field Description of the Glass Transition
Mode-coupling theory (MCT) is conjectured to be a mean-field description of
dynamics of the structural glass transition and the replica theory to be its
thermodynamic counterpart. However, the relationship between the two theories
remains controversial and quantitative comparison is lacking. In this Letter,
we investigate MCT for monatomic hard sphere fluids at arbitrary dimensions
above three and compare the results with replica theory. We find grave
discrepancies between the predictions of two theories. While MCT describes the
nonergodic parameter quantitatively better than the replica theory in three
dimension, it predicts a completely different dimension dependence of the
dynamical transition point. We find it to be due to the pathological behavior
of the nonergodic parameters derived from MCT, which exhibit negative tails in
real space at high dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett.: Typos have been correcte
Thermodynamics and Structural Properties of the High Density Gaussian Core Model
We numerically study thermodynamic and structural properties of the
one-component Gaussian core model (GCM) at very high densities. The solid-fluid
phase boundary is carefully determined. We find that the density dependence of
both the freezing and melting temperatures obey the asymptotic relation, , , where is the number density, which
is consistent with Stillinger's conjecture. Thermodynamic quantities such as
the energy and pressure and the structural functions such as the static
structure factor are also investigated in the fluid phase for a wide range of
temperature above the phase boundary. We compare the numerical results with the
prediction of the liquid theory with the random phase approximation (RPA). At
high temperatures, the results are in almost perfect agreement with RPA for a
wide range of density, as it has been already shown in the previous studies. In
the low temperature regime close to the phase boundary line, although RPA fails
to describe the structure factors and the radial distribution functions at the
length scales of the interparticle distance, it successfully predicts their
behaviors at shorter length scales. RPA also predicts thermodynamic quantities
such as the energy, pressure, and the temperature at which the thermal
expansion coefficient becomes negative, almost perfectly. Striking ability of
RPA to predict thermodynamic quantities even at high densities and low
temperatures is understood in terms of the decoupling of the length scales
which dictate thermodynamic quantities from the interparticle distance which
dominates the peak structures of the static structure factor due to the
softness of the Gaussian core potential.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
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