840 research outputs found
Josephson Plasma Resonance in Solid and Glass Phases of BiSrCaCuO
Vortex matter phases and phase transitions are investigated by means of
Josephson plasma resonance in under-doped BiSrCaCuO
single crystals in a microwave frequency range between 19 and 70 GHz.
Accompanied by the vortex lattice melting transition, a jump of the interlayer
phase coherence extracted from the field dependence of the plasma frequency was
observed. In the solid phase, the interlayer coherence little depends on field
at a temperature region well below while it gradually decreases as field
increases toward the melting line up to just below . As a result, the
magnitude of the jump decreases with increasing temperature and is gradually
lost in the vicinity of . This indicates that the vortex lines formed in
the vortex solid phase are thermally meandering and the phase transition
becomes weak especially just below .Comment: 5pages and 4 figures. Submitted to Physica C (Proceedings of
Plasma2000, Sendai
Longitudinal Properties of Two-Dimensional Classical Electron Liquids
The dynamic form factor and the dispersion relation of the plasma oscillation of two-dimensional classical systems of electrons with ordinary Coulomb interaction are obtained by numerical experiments in the domain of the plasma parameter 2.24≤√=(πn)(1/2)e(2)/T≤70.7, where n, e, and T are the areal number density, the electronic charge, and the temperature in energy units, respectively
Josephson Plasma Mode in Fields Parallel to Layers of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}
Josephson plasma resonance measurements under magnetic fields parallel to the
CuO_2 layers as functions of magnetic field, temperature, and microwave
frequency have been performed in Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} single crystals
with doping range being from optimal to under-doped side. The feature of the
resonance is quite unique and cannot be explained by the conventional
understandings of the Josephson plasma for H \parallel c, that requires a new
theory including coupling effect between Josephson vortex lattice and Josephson
plasma.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figure
Two Phase Collective Modes in Josephson Vortex Lattice in Intrinsic Josephson Junction BiSrCaCuO
Josephson plasma excitations in the high superconductor
BiSrCaCuO have been investigated in a wide microwave
frequency region (9.8 -- 75 GHz), in particular, in magnetic field applied
parallel to the plane of the single crystal. In sharp contrast to the case
for magnetic fields parallel to the c axis or tilted from the plane, it
was found that there are two kinds of resonance modes, which are split in
energy and possess two distinctly different magnetic field dependences. One
always lies higher in energy than the other and has a shallow minimum at about
0.8 kOe, then increases linearly with magnetic field. On the other hand,
another mode begins to appear only in a magnetic field (from a few kOe and
higher) and has a weakly decreasing tendency with increasing magnetic field. By
comparing with a recent theoretical model the higher energy mode can naturally
be attributed to the Josephson plasma resonance mode propagating along the
primitive reciprocal lattice vector of the Josephson vortex lattice, whereas
the lower frequency mode is assigned to the novel phase collective mode of the
Josephson vortex lattice, which has never been observed before.Comment: 11 pages and 10 figure
Monolithic superconducting emitter of tunable circularly polarized terahertz radiation
We propose an approach to control the polarization of terahertz (THz)
radiation from intrinsic Josephson-junction stacks in single crystalline
high-temperature superconductor . By monolithically
controlling the surface current distributions in the truncated square mesa
structure, we can modulate the polarization of the emitted THz wave as a result
of two orthogonal fundamental modes excited inside the mesa. Highly polarized
circular terahertz waves with a degree of circular polarization of more than
99% can be generated using an electrically controlled method. The emitted
radiation has a high intensity and a low axial ratio (AR<1 dB). The intuitive
results obtained from the numerical simulation based on the conventional
antenna theory are consistent with the observed emission characteristics.Comment: Submitted to PRApplie
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