40 research outputs found
Generation of slow intense optical solitons in a resonance photonic crystal
We demonstrate interesting and previously unforeseen properties of a pair of
gap solitons in a resonant photonic crystal which are predicted and explained
in a physically transparent form using both analytical and numerical methods.
The most important result is the fact that an oscillating gap soliton created
by the presence of a localized population inversion inside the crystal can be
manipulated by means of a proper choice of bit rate, phase and amplitude
modulation. Developing this idea, we are able to obtain qualitatively different
regimes of a resonant photonic crystal operation. In particular, a noteworthy
observation is that both the delay time and amplitude difference must exceed a
certain level to ensure effective control over the soliton dynamics
Elastic anomalies in HoNi2B2C single crystals
We have measured temperature and magnetic field dependencies of the sound
velocities and the sound attenuation in HoNi2B2C single crystals. The main
result is a huge softening the velocity of C66 mode due to a cooperative
Jahn-Teller effect, resulting in a tetragonal-orthorhombic structural phase
transition. Anomalies in the behavior of the C66 mode through various magnetic
phase transitions permit us to revise the low temperature H-T phase diagrams of
this compound.Comment: v2: a discussion of the C44 mode with the comparison to Y borocarbide
was adde
Optical Sum Rule anomalies in the High-Tc Cuprates
We provide a brief summary of the observed sum rule anomalies in the
high-T cuprate materials. A recent issue has been the impact of a
non-infinite frequency cutoff in the experiment. In the normal state, the
observed anomalously high temperature dependence can be explained as a `cutoff
effect'. The anomalous rise in the optical spectral weight below the
superconducting transition, however, remains as a solid experimental
observation, even with the use of a cutoff frequency.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, very brief review of optical sum rule anomal
Magnetic skyrmions and their lattices in triplet superconductors
Complete topological classification of solutions in SO(3) symmetric
Ginzburg-Landau free energy has been performed and a new class of solutions in
weak external magnetic field carrying two units of magnetic flux has been
identified. These solutions, magnetic skyrmions, do not have singular core like
Abrikosov vortices and at low magnetic field become lighter for strongly type
II superconductors. As a consequence, the lower critical magnetic field Hc1 is
reduced by a factor of log(kappa). Magnetic skyrmions repel each other as 1/r
at distances much larger then magnetic penetration depth forming relatively
robust triangular lattice. Magnetic induction near Hc1 increases gradually as
(H-Hc1)^2. This agrees very well with experiments on heavy fermion
superconductor UPt3. Newly discovered Ru based compounds Sr2RuO4 and
Sr2YRu(1-x)Cu(x)O6 are other possible candidates to possess skyrmion lattices.
Deviations from exact SO(3) symmetry are also studied.Comment: 23 pages, 10 eps figure
Magnetic skyrmion lattices in heavy fermion superconductor UPt3
Topological analysis of nearly SO(3)_{spin} symmetric Ginzburg--Landau
theory, proposed for UPt by Machida et al, shows that there exists a new
class of solutions carrying two units of magnetic flux: the magnetic skyrmion.
These solutions do not have singular core like Abrikosov vortices and at low
magnetic fields they become lighter for strongly type II superconductors.
Magnetic skyrmions repel each other as at distances much larger then the
magnetic penetration depth , forming a relatively robust triangular
lattice. The magnetic induction near is found to increase as
. This behavior agrees well with experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 column format; v2:misprint in the title is
correcte
Divergence of the orbital nuclear magnetic relaxation rate in metals
We analyze the nuclear magnetic relaxation rate due to the
coupling of nuclear spin to the orbital moment of itinerant electrons in
metals. In the clean non--interacting case, contributions from large--distance
current fluctuations add up to cause a divergence of . When
impurity scattering is present, the elastic mean free time cuts off the
divergence, and the magnitude of the effect at low temperatures is controlled
by the parameter , where is the chemical potential. The
spin--dipolar hyperfine coupling, while has the same spatial variation
as the orbital hyperfine coupling, does not produce a divergence in the nuclear
magnetic relaxation rate.Comment: 11pages; v4: The analysis of the normal state is more compelete now,
including a comparison with other hyperfine interactions and a detailed
discussion of the effect in representative metals. The superconducting state
is excluded from consideration in this pape
Small-Angle Neutron Scattering and Magnetization Study of HoNi2B2C
The superconducting and magnetic properties of HoNi2B2C single crystals are
investigated through transport, magnetometry and small-angle neutron scattering
measurements. In the magnetic phases that enter below the superconducting
critical temperature, the small-angle neutron scattering data uncover networks
of magnetic surfaces. These likely originate from uncompensated moments e.g. at
domain walls pinned to crystallographic grain boundaries. The field and
temperature dependent behaviour appears consistent with the metamagnetic
transitions reported in earlier works.Comment: 11 pages , 4 figures, submitted to Low Temperature Physic
Optical Sum Rule in Finite Bands
In a single finite electronic band the total optical spectral weight or
optical sum carries information on the interactions involved between the charge
carriers as well as on their band structure. It varies with temperature as well
as with impurity scattering. The single band optical sum also bears some
relationship to the charge carrier kinetic energy and, thus, can potentially
provide useful information, particularly on its change as the charge carriers
go from normal to superconducting state. Here we review the considerable
advances that have recently been made in the context of high oxides, both
theoretical and experimental.Comment: Review article accepted for publication in J. Low Temp. Phys. 29
pages, 33 figure