6,454 research outputs found

    Possible hard X-ray shortages in bursts from KS 1731-260 and 4U 1705-44

    Full text link
    Aims: A hard X-ray shortage, implying the cooling of the corona, was observed during bursts of IGR J17473-272, 4U 1636-536, Aql X-1, and GS 1826-238. Apart from these four sources, we investigate here an atoll sample, in which the number of bursts for each source is larger than 5, to explore the possible additional hard X-ray shortage during {\it Rossi X-ray timing explorer (RXTE)} era. Methods: According to the source catalog that shows type-I bursts, we analyzed all the available pointing observations of these sources carried out by the {\it RXTE} proportional counter array (PCA). We grouped and combined the bursts according to their outburst states and searched for the possible hard X-ray shortage while bursting. Results: We found that the island states of KS 1731-260 and 4U 1705-44 show a hard X-ray shortage at significant levels of 4.5 and 4.7 Οƒ\sigma and a systematic time lag of 0.9Β±2.10.9 \pm 2.1 s and 2.5Β±2.02.5 \pm 2.0 s with respect to the soft X-rays, respectively. While in their banana branches and other sources, we did not find any consistent shortage.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&A as a research not

    Spectral and optical properties in the antiphase stripe phase of the cuprate superconductors

    Full text link
    We investigate the superconducting order parameter, the spectral and optical properties in a stripe model with spin (charge) domain-derived scattering potential VsV_{s} (VcV_{c}). We show that the charge domain-derived scattering is less effective than the spin scattering on the suppression of superconductivity. For Vs≫VcV_{s}\gg V_{c}, the spectral weight concentrates on the (Ο€,0\pi,0) antinodal region, and a finite energy peak appears in the optical conductivity with the disappearance of the Drude peak. But for Vsβ‰ˆVcV_{s}\approx V_{c}, the spectral weight concentrates on the (Ο€/2,Ο€/2\pi/2,\pi/2) nodal region, and a residual Drude peak exists in the optical conductivity without the finite energy peak. These results consistently account for the divergent observations in the ARPES and optical conductivity experiments in several high-TcT_c cuprates, and suggest that the "insulating" and "metallic" properties are intrinsic to the stripe state, depending on the relative strength of the spin and charge domain-derived scattering potentials.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Coexistence of the antiferromagnetic and superconducting order and its effect on spin dynamics in electron-doped high-TcT_{c} cuprates

    Full text link
    In the framework of the slave-boson approach to the tβˆ’tβ€²βˆ’tβ€²β€²βˆ’Jt-t'-t''-J model, it is found that for electron-doped high-TcT_c cuprates, the staggered antiferromagnetic (AF) order coexists with superconducting (SC) order in a wide doping level ranged from underdoped to nearly optimal doping at the mean-field level. In the coexisting phase, it is revealed that the spin response is commensurate in a substantial frequency range below a crossover frequency Ο‰c\omega_{c} for all dopings considered, and it switches to the incommensurate structure when the frequency is higher than Ο‰c\omega_{c}. This result is in agreement with the experimental measurements. Comparison of the spin response between the coexisting phase and the pure SC phase with a dx2βˆ’y2d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}-wave pairing plus a higher harmonics term (DP+HH) suggests that the inclusion of the two-band effect is important to consistently account for both the dispersion of the spin response and the non-monotonic gap behavior in the electron-doped cuprates.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
    • …
    corecore