2,443 research outputs found
S wave superconductivity in newly discovered superconductor BaTiSbO revealed by Sb-NMR/Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance measurements
We report the Sb-NMR/nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR)
measurements on the newly-discovered superconductor BaTiSbO with a
two-dimensional TiO square-net layer formed with Ti (3). NQR
measurements revealed that the in-plane four-fold symmetry is broken at the Sb
site below 40 K, without an internal field appearing at the Sb
site. These exclude a spin-density wave (SDW)/ charge density wave (CDW)
ordering with incommensurate correlations, but can be understood with the
commensurate CDW ordering at . The spin-lattice relaxation rate
, measured at the four-fold symmetry breaking site, decreases below
superconducting (SC) transition temperature , indicative of the
microscopic coexistence of superconductivity and the CDW/SDW phase below
. Furthermore, of Sb-NQR shows a coherence peak just
below and decreases exponentially at low temperatures. These
results are in sharp contrast with those in cuprate and iron-based
superconductors, and strongly suggest that its SC symmetry is classified to an
ordinary s-wave state.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Multi-Triplet Magnons in SrCu(BO) Studied by Thermal Conductivity Measurements in Magnetic Fields
We have measured the thermal conductivity parallel to the a-axis of the
Zn-free and 1% Zn-substituted SrCuZn(BO) in magnetic fields
up to 14 T, in order to examine the thermal conductivity due to the
multi-triplet magnons. It has been found that the thermal conductivity peak
observed in the spin gap state is suppressed by the substitution of Zn for Cu
in high magnetic fields above 6 T, while it is not changed in low magnetic
fields below 6 T. The results suggest that the thermal conductivity peak in the
spin-gap state of SrCu(BO) is composed of not only thermal
conductivity due to phonons but also that due to the multi-triplet magnons in
high fields above 6 T.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Nonlinear magnetization dynamics of antiferromagnetic spin resonance induced by intense terahertz magnetic field
We report on the nonlinear magnetization dynamics of a HoFeO3 crystal induced
by a strong terahertz magnetic field resonantly enhanced with a split ring
resonator and measured with magneto-optical Kerr effect microscopy. The
terahertz magnetic field induces a large change (~40%) in the spontaneous
magnetization. The frequency of the antiferromagnetic resonance decreases in
proportion to the square of the magnetization change. A modified
Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation with a phenomenological nonlinear damping term
quantitatively reproduced the nonlinear dynamics
Instability of isolated triplet excitations on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice (SSL)
Configurations of singlets and triplets on the SSL have been proposed in the
literature as variational ground states of the Shastry-Sutherland model at
fixed magnetization M. We prove, that isolated triplet excitations on the SSL
are unstable if the coupling alpha falls below a critical value alpha_c=2.0
(approx.). The instability should be visible in the compound SrCu_2(BO_3)_2
where a coupling alpha^*=1.48 is realized.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Far infrared study of the two dimensional dimer spin system SrCu_2(BO_3)_2
Using far-infrared spectroscopy in magnetic fields up to 12T we have studied
a two-dimensional dimer spin gap system SrCu_2(BO_3)_2. We found several
infrared active modes in the dimerized state (below 10K) in the frequency range
from 3 to 100cm^-1. The measured splitting from the ground state to the excited
triplet M_S=0 sublevel is Delta_1=24.2cm^-1 and the other two triplet state
sublevels in zero magnetic field are 1.4cm^-1 below and above the M_S=0
sublevel. Another multiplet is at Delta_2=37.6cm^-1 from the ground state. A
strong electric dipole active transition polarized in the (ab)-plane is
activated in the dimer spin system below 15K at 52cm^-1.Comment: 4 pages including 5 figures, submitted to PRB, instrumental arte
facts remove
Geodynamo and mantle convection simulations on the Earth Simulator using the Yin-Yang grid
We have developed finite difference codes based on the Yin-Yang grid for the
geodynamo simulation and the mantle convection simulation. The Yin-Yang grid is
a kind of spherical overset grid that is composed of two identical component
grids. The intrinsic simplicity of the mesh configuration of the Yin-Yang grid
enables us to develop highly optimized simulation codes on massively parallel
supercomputers. The Yin-Yang geodynamo code has achieved 15.2 Tflops with 4096
processors on the Earth Simulator. This represents 46% of the theoretical peak
performance. The Yin-Yang mantle code has enabled us to carry out mantle
convection simulations in realistic regimes with a Rayleigh number of
including strongly temperature-dependent viscosity with spatial contrast up to
.Comment: Plenary talk at SciDAC 200
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