589 research outputs found
Angle-resolved and core-level photoemission study of interfacing the topological insulator Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 with Ag, Nb and Fe
Interfaces between a bulk-insulating topological insulator (TI) and metallic
adatoms have been studied using high-resolution, angle-resolved and core-level
photoemission. Fe, Nb and Ag were evaporated onto Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 (BSTS)
surfaces both at room temperature and 38K. The coverage- and
temperature-dependence of the adsorption and interfacial formation process have
been investigated, highlighting the effects of the overlayer growth on the
occupied electronic structure of the TI. For all coverages at room temperature
and for those equivalent to less than 0.1 monolayer at low temperature all
three metals lead to a downward shift of the TI's bands with respect to the
Fermi level. At room temperature Ag appears to intercalate efficiently into the
van der Waals gap of BSTS, accompanied by low-level substitution of the Te/Se
atoms of the termination layer of the crystal. This Te/Se substitution with
silver increases significantly for low temperature adsorption, and can even
dominate the electrostatic environment of the Bi/Sb atoms in the BSTS
near-surface region. On the other hand, Fe and Nb evaporants remain close to
the termination layer of the crystal. On room temperature deposition, they
initially substitute isoelectronically for Bi as a function of coverage, before
substituting for Te/Se atoms. For low temperature deposition, Fe and Nb are too
immobile for substitution processes and show a behaviour consistent with
clustering on the surface. For both Ag and Fe/Nb, these differing adsorption
pathways leads to the qualitatively similar and remarkable behavior for low
temperature deposition that the chemical potential first moves upward (n-type
dopant behavior) and then downward (p-type behavior) on increasing coverage.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. In our Phys. Rev. B manuscript an error was made
in formulating the last sentence of the abstract that, unfortunately, was
missed in the page proofs. Version 2 on arxiv has the correct formulation of
this sentenc
Photoemission of BiSe with Circularly Polarized Light: Probe of Spin Polarization or Means for Spin Manipulation?
Topological insulators are characterized by Dirac cone surface states with
electron spins aligned in the surface plane and perpendicular to their momenta.
Recent theoretical and experimental work implied that this specific spin
texture should enable control of photoelectron spins by circularly polarized
light. However, these reports questioned the so far accepted interpretation of
spin-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. We solve this puzzle and show that
vacuum ultraviolet photons (50-70 eV) with linear or circular polarization
probe indeed the initial state spin texture of BiSe while circularly
polarized 6 eV low energy photons flip the electron spins out of plane and
reverse their spin polarization. Our photoemission calculations, considering
the interplay between the varying probing depth, dipole selection rules and
spin-dependent scattering effects involving initial and final states explain
these findings, and reveal proper conditions for light-induced spin
manipulation. This paves the way for future applications of topological
insulators in opto-spintronic devices.Comment: Submitted for publication (2013
Ferrimagnetic nanostructures for magnetic memory bits
Increasing the magnetic data recording density requires reducing the size of
the individual memory elements of a recording layer as well as employing
magnetic materials with temperature-dependent functionalities. Therefore, it is
predicted that the near future of magnetic data storage technology involves a
combination of energy-assisted recording on nanometer-scale magnetic media. We
present the potential of heat-assisted magnetic recording on a patterned
sample; a ferrimagnetic alloy composed of a rare earth and a transition metal,
DyCo, which is grown on a hexagonal-ordered nanohole array membrane. The
magnetization of the antidot array sample is out-of-plane oriented at room
temperature and rotates towards in-plane upon heating above its
spin-reorientation temperature (T) of ~350 K, just above room temperature.
Upon cooling back to room temperature (below T), we observe a well-defined
and unexpected in-plane magnetic domain configuration modulating with ~45 nm.
We discuss the underlying mechanisms giving rise to this behavior by comparing
the magnetic properties of the patterned sample with the ones of its extended
thin film counterpart. Our results pave the way for novel applications of
ferrimagnetic antidot arrays of superior functionality in magnetic nano-devices
near room temperature.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Topological surface state under graphene for two-dimensional spintronics in air
Spin currents which allow for a dissipationless transport of information can
be generated by electric fields in semiconductor heterostructures in the
presence of a Rashba-type spin-orbit coupling. The largest Rashba effects occur
for electronic surface states of metals but these cannot exist but under
ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Here, we reveal a giant Rashba effect ({\alpha}_R
~ 1.5E-10 eVm) on a surface state of Ir(111). We demonstrate that its spin
splitting and spin polarization remain unaffected when Ir is covered with
graphene. The graphene protection is, in turn, sufficient for the spin-split
surface state to survive in ambient atmosphere. We discuss this result along
with evidences for a topological protection of the surface state.Comment: includes supplementary informatio
Conserved Mechanisms of Tumorigenesis in the Drosophila Adult Midgut
<div><p>Whereas the series of genetic events leading to colorectal cancer (CRC) have been well established, the precise functions that these alterations play in tumor progression and how they disrupt intestinal homeostasis remain poorly characterized. Activation of the Wnt/Wg signaling pathway by a mutation in the gene APC is the most common trigger for CRC, inducing benign lesions that progress to carcinomas due to the accumulation of other genetic alterations. Among those, Ras mutations drive tumour progression in CRC, as well as in most epithelial cancers. As mammalian and <i>Drosophila</i>'s intestines share many similarities, we decided to explore the alterations induced in the <i>Drosophila</i> midgut by the combined activation of the Wnt signaling pathway with gain of function of Ras signaling in the intestinal stem cells. Here we show that compound Apc-Ras clones, but not clones bearing the individual mutations, expand as aggressive intestinal tumor-like outgrowths. These lesions reproduce many of the human CRC hallmarks such as increased proliferation, blockade of cell differentiation and cell polarity and disrupted organ architecture. This process is followed by expression of tumoral markers present in human lesions. Finally, a metabolic behavioral assay shows that these flies suffer a progressive deterioration in intestinal homeostasis, providing a simple readout that could be used in screens for tumor modifiers or therapeutic compounds. Taken together, our results illustrate the conservation of the mechanisms of CRC tumorigenesis in <i>Drosophila</i>, providing an excellent model system to unravel the events that, upon mutation in Apc and Ras, lead to CRC initiation and progression.</p></div
Age of Islet Autoantibody Appearance and Mean Levels of Insulin, but Not GAD or IA-2 Autoantibodies, Predict Age of Diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes: Diabetes Autoimmunity Study in the Young
Quantitative determination of spin-dependent quasiparticle lifetimes and electronic correlations in hcp cobalt
We report on a quantitative investigation of the spin-dependent quasiparticle
lifetimes and electron correlation effects in ferromagnetic hcp Co(0001) by
means of spin and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. The experimental
spectra are compared in detail to state-of-the-art many-body calculations
within the dynamical mean field theory and the three-body scattering
approximation, including a full calculation of the one-step photoemission
process. From this comparison we conclude that although strong local many-body
Coulomb interactions are of major importance for the qualitative description of
correlation effects in Co, more sophisticated many-body calculations are needed
in order to improve the quantitative agreement between theory and experiment,
in particular concerning the linewidths. The quality of the overall agreement
obtained for Co indicates that the effect of non-local correlations becomes
weaker with increasing atomic number
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