2,272 research outputs found

    Macroscopic Anisotropy and Symmetry Breaking in the Pyrochlore Antiferromagnet Gd2_{2}Ti2_{2}O7_{7}}

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    In the Heisenberg antiferromagnet Gd2Ti2O7Gd_2Ti_2O_7, the exchange interactions are geometrically frustrated by the pyrochlore lattice structure. This ESR study reveals a strong temperature dependent anisotropy with respect to a [111] body diagonal below a temperature TA=80T_A=80 K, despite the spin only nature of the Gd3+Gd^{3+} ion. Anisotropy and symmetry breaking can nevertheless appear through the superexchange interaction. The presence of short range planar correlation restricted to specific Kagom\'{e} planes is sufficient to explain the two ESR modes studied in this work.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Decoherence processes in a current biased dc SQUID

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    A current bias dc SQUID behaves as an anharmonic quantum oscillator controlled by a bias current and an applied magnetic flux. We consider here its two level limit consisting of the two lower energy states | 0 \right> and | 1 \right>. We have measured energy relaxation times and microwave absorption for different bias currents and fluxes in the low microwave power limit. Decoherence times are extracted. The low frequency flux and current noise have been measured independently by analyzing the probability of current switching from the superconducting to the finite voltage state, as a function of applied flux. The high frequency part of the current noise is derived from the electromagnetic environment of the circuit. The decoherence of this quantum circuit can be fully accounted by these current and flux noise sources.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Measuring spectrum of spin wave using vortex dynamics

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    We propose to measure the spectrum of magnetic excitation in magnetic materials using motion of vortex lattice driven by both ac and dc current in superconductors. When the motion of vortex lattice is resonant with oscillation of magnetic moments, the voltage decreases at a given current. From transport measurement, one can obtain frequency of the magnetic excitation with the wave number determined by vortex lattice constant. By changing the lattice constant through applied magnetic fields, one can obtains the spectrum of the magnetic excitation up to a wave vector of order 10 nm110\rm{\ nm^{-1}}.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Spin-memory loss at Co/Ru interfaces

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    We have determined the spin-memory-loss parameter, δCo/Ru\delta_{Co/Ru}, by measuring the transmission of spin-triplet and spin-singlet Cooper pairs across Co/Ru interfaces in Josephson junctions and by Current-Perpendicular-to-Plane Giant Magnetoresistance (CPP-GMR) techniques. The probability of spin-memory loss at the Co/Ru interface is (1exp(δCo/Ru))(1-exp(-\delta_{Co/Ru})). From the CPP-MR, we obtain δCo/Ru=0.340.02+0.04\delta_{Co/Ru} = 0.34^{+0.04}_{-0.02} that is in good agreement with δCo/Ru=0.35±0.08\delta_{Co/Ru} = 0.35 \pm 0.08 obtained from spin-triplet transmission. For spin-singlet transmission, we have δCo/Ru=0.64±0.05\delta_{Co/Ru} = 0.64 \pm 0.05 that is different from that obtained from CPP-GMR and spin-triplet transmission. The source of this difference is not understood.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure

    From laser cooling to aging: a unified Levy flight description

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    Intriguing phenomena such as subrecoil laser cooling of atoms, or aging phenomenon in glasses, have in common that the systems considered do not reach a steady-state during the experiments, although the experimental time scales are very large compared to the microscopic ones. We revisit some standard models describing these phenomena, and reformulate them in a unified framework in terms of lifetimes of the microscopic states of the system. A universal dynamical mechanism emerges, leading to a generic time-dependent distribution of lifetimes, independently of the physical situation considered.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication in American Journal of Physic

    Galilean Lee Model of the Delta Function Potential

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    The scattering cross section associated with a two dimensional delta function has recently been the object of considerable study. It is shown here that this problem can be put into a field theoretical framework by the construction of an appropriate Galilean covariant theory. The Lee model with a standard Yukawa interaction is shown to provide such a realization. The usual results for delta function scattering are then obtained in the case that a stable particle exists in the scattering channel provided that a certain limit is taken in the relevant parameter space. In the more general case in which no such limit is taken finite corrections to the cross section are obtained which (unlike the pure delta function case) depend on the coupling constant of the model.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figure

    Diamagnetic persistent currents for electrons in ballistic billiards subject to a point flux

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    We study the persistent current of noninteracting electrons subject to a pointlike magnetic flux in the simply connected chaotic Robnik-Berry quantum billiard, and also in an annular analog thereof. For the simply connected billiard we find a large diamagnetic contribution to the persistent current at small flux, which is independent of the flux and is proportional to the number of electrons (or equivalently the density since we keep the area fixed). The size of this diamagnetic contribution is much larger than mesoscopic fluctuations in the persistent current in the simply connected billiard, and can ultimately be traced to the response of the angular momentum l=0l=0 levels (neglected in semiclassical expansions) on the unit disk to a pointlike flux at its center. The same behavior is observed for the annular billiard when the inner radius is much smaller than the outer one, while the usual fluctuating persistent current and Anderson-like localization due to boundary scattering are seen when the annulus tends to a one-dimensional ring. We explore the conditions for the observability of this phenomenon.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures; added references for section

    The Cooper Pair Pump as a Quantized Current Source

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    A new charge quantization in a phase-polarized Cooper Pair Pump (CPP) is proposed, based on the topological properties of its Hamiltonian ground state over a three-dimensional parameter space P\mathbb{P}. The charge is quantized using a set of path in P\mathbb{P} covering the surface of a torus, and is a multiple of the integer Chern index c1c_1 of this surface. This quantization is asymptotic but the pumped charge converges rapidly to the quantized value with the increase in the path frequency. The topological nature of the current makes this CPP implementation an excellent candidate for a metrological current standard.Comment: 4 PRL page

    Fostering collective intelligence education

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    New educational models are necessary to update learning environments to the digitally shared communication and information. Collective intelligence is an emerging field that already has a significant impact in many areas and will have great implications in education, not only from the side of new methodologies but also as a challenge for education. This paper proposes an approach to a collective intelligence model of teaching using Internet to combine two strategies: idea management and real time assessment in the class. A digital tool named Fabricius has been created supporting these two elements to foster the collaboration and engagement of students in the learning process. As a result of the research we propose a list of KPI trying to measure individual and collective performance. We are conscious that this is just a first approach to define which aspects of a class following a course can be qualified and quantified.Postprint (published version

    Central limit theorem for anomalous scaling due to correlations

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    We derive a central limit theorem for the probability distribution of the sum of many critically correlated random variables. The theorem characterizes a variety of different processes sharing the same asymptotic form of anomalous scaling and is based on a correspondence with the L\'evy-Gnedenko uncorrelated case. In particular, correlated anomalous diffusion is mapped onto L\'evy diffusion. Under suitable assumptions, the nonstandard multiplicative structure used for constructing the characteristic function of the total sum allows us to determine correlations of partial sums exclusively on the basis of the global anomalous scaling.Comment: The content of this manuscript was presented at the 3rd International Conference "Next Sigma-Phi", Kolymbari - Greece, 13-18 August 200
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