188 research outputs found
Temperature Dependence of the Magnetic Penetration Depth in the Vortex State of the Pyrochlore Superconductor, Cd2Re2O7
We report transverse field and zero field muon spin rotation studies of the
superconducting rhenium oxide pyrochlore, Cd2Re2O7. Transverse field
measurements (H=0.007 T) show line broadening below Tc, which is characteristic
of a vortex state, demonstrating conclusively the type-II nature of this
superconductor. The penetration depth is seen to level off below about 400 mK
(T/Tc~0.4), with a rather large value of lambda (T=0)~7500A. The temperature
independent behavior below ~ 400 mK is consistent with a nodeless
superconducting energy gap. Zero-field measurements indicate no static magnetic
fields developing below the transition temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, REVTEX 4, submitted to PR
Spin-glass state of vortices in YBa2Cu3Oy and La2-xSrxCuO4 below the metal-to-insulator crossover
Highly disordered magnetism confined to individual weakly interacting
vortices is detected by muon spin rotation in two different families of
high-transition-temperature superconductors, but only in samples on the
low-doping side of the low-temperature normal state metal-to-insulator
crossover (MIC). The results support an extended quantum phase transition (QPT)
theory of competing magnetic and superconducting orders that incorporates the
coupling between CuO2 planes. Contrary to what has been inferred from previous
experiments, the static magnetism that coexists with superconductivity near the
field-induced QPT is not ordered. Our findings unravel the mystery of the MIC
and establish that the normal state of high-temperature superconductors is
ubiquitously governed by a magnetic quantum critical point in the
superconducting phase.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Expansion of the Vortex Cores in YBa2Cu3O6.95 at Low Magnetic Fields
Muon spin rotation spectroscopy has been used to measure the effective size
of the vortex cores in optimally doped YBa2Cu3O6.95 as a function of
temperature and magnetic field deep in the superconducting state. While the
core size at H=2T is close to 20 angstroms and consistent with that measured by
STM at 6T, we find a striking increase in the core size at lower magnetic
fields, where it approaches an extraordinarily large value of about 100
angstroms. This suggests that the average value of the superconducting
coherence length in cuprate superconductors may be larger than previously
thought at low magnetic fields.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 text fil
Electronic structure of the muonium center as a shallow donor in ZnO
The electronic structure and the location of muonium centers (Mu) in
single-crystalline ZnO were determined for the first time. Two species of Mu
centers with extremely small hyperfine parameters have been observed below 40
K. Both Mu centers have an axial-symmetric hyperfine structure along with a
[0001] axis, indicating that they are located at the AB_{O,//} and BC_{//}
sites. It is inferred from their small ionization energy (~6 meV and 50 meV)
and hyperfine parameters (~10^{-4} times the vacuum value) that these centers
behave as shallow donors, strongly suggesting that hydrogen is one of the
primary origins of n type conductivity in as-grown ZnO.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
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