100 research outputs found
Magnetic susceptibility of EuTe/PbTe Heisenberg superlattices: experimental and theoretical studies
We report results on the temperature dependence of the susceptibilities of a
set of MBE-grown short-period EuTe/PbTe antiferromagnetic superlattices having
different EuTe layer thicknesses. In-plane and orthogonal susceptibilities have
been measured and display a strong anisotropy at low temperature, confirming
the occurrence of a magnetic phase transition in the thicker samples, as seen
also in neutron diffraction studies. We suggest that dipolar interactions
stabilize antiferromagnetic long-range order in an otherwise isotropic system
and we present numerical and analytical results for the low-temperature
orthogonal susceptibility.Comment: 30 pages, 8 ps figures, RevTe
NetKet 3: Machine Learning Toolbox for Many-Body Quantum Systems
We introduce version 3 of NetKet, the machine learning toolbox for many-body quantum physics. NetKet is built around neural-network quantum states and provides efficient algorithms for their evaluation and optimization. This new version is built on top of JAX, a differentiable programming and accelerated linear algebra framework for the Python programming language. The most significant new feature is the possibility to define arbitrary neural network ansÀtze in pure Python code using the concise notation of machine-learning frameworks, which allows for just-in-time compilation as well as the implicit generation of gradients thanks to automatic differentiation. NetKet 3 also comes with support for GPU and TPU accelerators, advanced support for discrete symmetry groups, chunking to scale up to thousands of degrees of freedom, drivers for quantum dynamics applications, and improved modularity, allowing users to use only parts of the toolbox as a foundation for their own code
Electron spin-lattice relaxation of Yb3+ and Gd3+ ions in glasses
The electron spin-lattice relaxation rate (T1 -1) was measured in two glass samples: (i) a phosphate glass doped with 1 wt% Yb2O3 and (ii) a Li2Si4O9 glass sample doped with 0.2 wt% Gd2O3. In the Yb3+-doped glass sample, T1, was measured by an electron-spin-echo technique from 4.2 to 6 K, by the modulation method from 10 to 26 K and by the EPR linewidth from 30 to 100 K. It was found that (T1 -1) â Tn with n = 9 in the range 4.2-6 K. n decreased gradually as the temperature was increased and tended towards 2 above 40 K. Over the entire temperature range 4.2-100 K, (T1 -1) was fitted to AT + BT9J8 (ÎD/T) (where A and B are two temperature-independent constants, J8 is the well-known Van Vleck integral and ÎD is the Debye temperature). The value of ÎD (= 46.3±0.9 K) so determined is in good agreement with that of Stevens and Stapleton from their T1, measurements in the range 1.5 to 7 K. In the Gd3+-doped glass, it was observed that (T1 -1) â T over the range 50-150 K. The data for Ye3+-doped glass sample were accounted for by assuming that the phonon modulation of the ligand field is the dominant mechanism, associated with a low Debye temperature in accordance with the published data obtained by using other techniques to study lattice dynamics. On the other hand, the data on the Gd3+-doped glass sample were explained to be predominantly due to a mechanism involving Two-Level-Systems (TLS). © Springer-Verlag 1996 Printed in Austria
Scale invariance of a diodelike tunnel junction
We measure the current vs voltage (I-V) characteristics of a diodelike tunnel
junction consisting of a sharp metallic tip placed at a variable distance d
from a planar collector and emitting electrons via electric-field assisted
emission. All curves collapse onto one single graph when I is plotted as a
function of the single scaling variable Vd^{-\lambda}, d being varied from a
few mm to a few nm, i.e., by about six orders of magnitude. We provide an
argument that finds the exponent {\lambda} within the singular behavior
inherent to the electrostatics of a sharp tip. A simulation of the tunneling
barrier for a realistic tip reproduces both the scaling behavior and the small
but significant deviations from scaling observed experimentally.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
A Scaling Hypothesis for Modulated Systems
We propose a scaling hypothesis for pattern-forming systems in which
modulation of the order parameter results from the competition between a
short-ranged interaction and a long-ranged interaction decaying with some power
of the inverse distance. With L being a spatial length characterizing
the modulated phase, all thermodynamic quantities are predicted to scale like
some power of L. The scaling dimensions with respect to L only depend on the
dimensionality of the system d and the exponent \alpha. Scaling predictions are
in agreement with experiments on ultra-thin ferromagnetic films and
computational results. Finally, our scaling hypothesis implies that, for some
range of values \alpha>d, Inverse-Symmetry-Breaking transitions may appear
systematically in the considered class of frustrated systems.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, expanded versio
Ferromagnetism and Temperature-Driven Reorientation Transition in Thin Itinerant-Electron Films
The temperature-driven reorientation transition which, up to now, has been
studied by use of Heisenberg-type models only, is investigated within an
itinerant-electron model. We consider the Hubbard model for a thin fcc(100)
film together with the dipole interaction and a layer-dependent anisotropy
field. The isotropic part of the model is treated by use of a generalization of
the spectral-density approach to the film geometry. The magnetic properties of
the film are investigated as a function of temperature and film thickness and
are analyzed in detail with help of the spin- and layer-dependent quasiparticle
density of states. By calculating the temperature dependence of the
second-order anisotropy constants we find that both types of reorientation
transitions, from out-of-plane to in-plane (``Fe-type'') and from in-plane to
out-of-plane (``Ni-type'') magnetization are possible within our model. In the
latter case the inclusion of a positive volume anisotropy is vital. The
reorientation transition is mediated by a strong reduction of the surface
magnetization with respect to the inner layers as a function of temperature and
is found to depend significantly on the total band occupation.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures included (eps), Phys Rev B in pres
Hallmark of quantum skipping in energy filtered lensless scanning electron microscopy
We simulate the electronic system of ejected electrons arising when a tip, positioned few 10 amp; 8201;nm away from a surface, is operated in the field emission regime. We find that, by repeated quantum reflections quantum skipping , electrons produced at the nanoscale primary site are able to reach the macroscopic environment surrounding the tip surface region. We observe the hallmark of quantum skipping in an energy filtered experiment that detects the spin of the ejected electron
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