43 research outputs found
Low temperature superlattice in monoclinic PZT
TEM has shown that the strongly piezoelectric material Pb(Zr0.52Ti0.48)O3
separates into two phases at low temperatures. The majority phase is the
monoclinic phase previously found by x-ray diffraction. The minority phase,
with a nanoscale coherence length, is a slightly distorted variant of the first
resulting from the anti-phase rotation of the oxygen octahedra about [111].
This work clears up a recent controversy about the origin of superlattice peaks
in these materials, and supports recent theoretical results predicting the
coexistence of ferroelectric and rotational instabilities.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 eps figures embedded. JPG version of figs. 2&4 is also
include
Exact soliton solution and inelastic two-soliton collision in spin chain driven by a time-dependent magnetic field
We investigate dynamics of exact N-soliton trains in spin chain driven by a
time-dependent magnetic field by means of an inverse scattering transformation.
The one-soliton solution indicates obviously the spin precession around the
magnetic field and periodic shape-variation induced by the time varying field
as well. In terms of the general soliton solutions N-soliton interaction and
particularly various two-soliton collisions are analyzed. The inelastic
collision by which we mean the soliton shape change before and after collision
appears generally due to the time varying field. We, moreover, show that
complete inelastic collisions can be achieved by adjusting spectrum and field
parameters. This may lead a potential technique of shape control of soliton.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Elastic Scattering by Deterministic and Random Fractals: Self-Affinity of the Diffraction Spectrum
The diffraction spectrum of coherent waves scattered from fractal supports is
calculated exactly. The fractals considered are of the class generated
iteratively by successive dilations and translations, and include
generalizations of the Cantor set and Sierpinski carpet as special cases. Also
randomized versions of these fractals are treated. The general result is that
the diffraction intensities obey a strict recursion relation, and become
self-affine in the limit of large iteration number, with a self-affinity
exponent related directly to the fractal dimension of the scattering object.
Applications include neutron scattering, x-rays, optical diffraction, magnetic
resonance imaging, electron diffraction, and He scattering, which all display
the same universal scaling.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures. Phys. Rev. E, in press. More info available at
http://www.fh.huji.ac.il/~dani