621 research outputs found
Electronic contribution to the oscillations of a gravitational antenna
We carefully analyse the contribution to the oscillations of a metallic
gravitational antenna due to the interaction between the electrons of the bar
and the incoming gravitational wave. To this end, we first derive the total
microscopic Hamiltonian of the wave-antenna system and then compute the
contribution to the attenuation factor due to the electron-graviton
interaction. As compared to the ordinary damping factor, which is due to the
electron viscosity, this term turns out to be totally negligible. This result
confirms that the only relevant mechanism for the interaction of a
gravitational wave with a metallic antenna is its direct coupling with the bar
normal modes.Comment: 25 pages, no figure
Nuclear spin relaxation probed by a single quantum dot
We present measurements on nuclear spin relaxation probed by a single quantum
dot in a high-mobility electron gas. Current passing through the dot leads to a
spin transfer from the electronic to the nuclear spin system. Applying electron
spin resonance the transfer mechanism can directly be tuned. Additionally, the
dependence of nuclear spin relaxation on the dot gate voltage is observed. We
find electron-nuclear relaxation times of the order of 10 minutes
Onset of Vortices in Thin Superconducting Strips and Wires
Spontaneous nucleation and the consequent penetration of vortices into thin
superconducting films and wires, subjected to a magnetic field, can be
considered as a nonlinear stage of primary instability of the current-carrying
superconducting state. The development of the instability leads to the
formation of a chain of vortices in strips and helicoidal vortex lines in
wires. The boundary of instability was obtained analytically. The nonlinear
stage was investigated by simulations of the time-dependent generalized
Ginzburg-Landau equation.Comment: REVTeX 3.0, 12 pages, 5Postscript figures (uuencoded). Accepted for
Phys. Rev.
Finite temperature scaling theory for the collapse of Bose-Einstein condensate
We show how to apply the scaling theory in an inhomogeneous system like
harmonically trapped Bose condensate at finite temperatures. We calculate the
temperature dependence of the critical number of particles by a scaling theory
within the Hartree-Fock approximation and find that there is a dramatic
increase in the critical number of particles as the condensation point is
approached.Comment: Published online [6 pages, 3 figures
Influence of uncorrelated overlayers on the magnetism in thin itinerant-electron films
The influence of uncorrelated (nonmagnetic) overlayers on the magnetic
properties of thin itinerant-electron films is investigated within the
single-band Hubbard model. The Coulomb correlation between the electrons in the
ferromagnetic layers is treated by using the spectral density approach (SDA).
It is found that the presence of nonmagnetic layers has a strong effect on the
magnetic properties of thin films. The Curie temperatures of very thin films
are modified by the uncorrelated overlayers. The quasiparticle density of
states is used to analyze the results. In addition, the coupling between the
ferromagnetic layers and the nonmagnetic layers is discussed in detail. The
coupling depends on the band occupation of the nonmagnetic layers, while it is
almost independent of the number of the nonmagnetic layers. The induced
polarization in the nonmagnetic layers shows a long-range decreasing
oscillatory behavior and it depends on the coupling between ferromagnetic and
nonmagnetic layers.Comment: 9 pages, RevTex, 6 figures, for related work see:
http://orion.physik.hu-berlin.d
Hadronic freeze-out following a first order hadronization phase transition in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions
We analyze the hadronic freeze-out in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions
at RHIC in a transport approach which combines hydrodynamics for the early,
dense, deconfined stage of the reaction with a microscopic non-equilibrium
model for the later hadronic stage at which the hydrodynamic equilibrium
assumptions are not valid. With this ansatz we are able to self-consistently
calculate the freeze-out of the system and determine space-time hypersurfaces
for individual hadron species. The space-time domains of the freeze-out for
several hadron species are found to be actually four-dimensional, and differ
drastically for the individual hadrons species. Freeze-out radii distributions
are similar in width for most hadron species, even though the Omega-baryon is
found to be emitted rather close to the phase boundary and shows the smallest
freeze-out radii and times among all baryon species. The total lifetime of the
system does not change by more than 10% when going from SPS to RHIC energies.Comment: 11 pages, 4 eps-figures included, revised versio
Theory of proximity effect in superconductor/ferromagnet heterostructures
We present a microscopic theory of proximity effect in the
ferromagnet/superconductor/ferromagnet (F/S/F) nanostructures where S is s-wave
low-T_c superconductor and F's are layers of 3d transition ferromagnetic metal.
Our approach is based on the solution of Gor'kov equations for the normal and
anomalous Green's functions together with a self-consistent evaluation of the
superconducting order parameter. We take into account the elastic
spin-conserving scattering of the electrons assuming s-wave scattering in the S
layer and s-d scattering in the F layers. In accordance with the previous
quasiclassical theories, we found that due to exchange field in the ferromagnet
the anomalous Green's function F(z) exhibits the damping oscillations in the
F-layer as a function of distance z from the S/F interface. In the given model
a half of period of oscillations is determined by the length \xi_m^0 = \pi
v_F/E_ex, where v_F is the Fermi velocity and E_ex is the exchange field, while
damping is governed by the length l_0 = (1/l_{\uparrow} +
1/l_{\downarrow})^{-1} with l_{\uparrow} and l_{\downarrow} being
spin-dependent mean free paths in the ferromagnet. The superconducting
transition temperature T_c(d_F) of the F/S/F trilayer shows the damping
oscillations as a function of the F-layer thickness d_F with period \xi_F =
\pi/\sqrt{m E_ex}, where m is the effective electron mass. We show that strong
spin-conserving scattering either in the superconductor or in the ferromagnet
significantly suppresses these oscillations. The calculated T_c(d_F)
dependences are compared with existing experimental data for Fe/Nb/Fe trilayers
and Nb/Co multilayers.Comment: 13 pages, REVTeX4, 8 PS-figures; improved version, submitted to PR
Gravitational and electroweak unification by replacing diffeomorphisms with larger group
The covariance group for general relativity, the diffeomorphisms, is replaced
by a group of coordinate transformations which contains the diffeomorphisms as
a proper subgroup. The larger group is defined by the assumption that all
observers will agree whether any given quantity is conserved. Alternatively,
and equivalently, it is defined by the assumption that all observers will agree
that the general relativistic wave equation describes the propagation of light.
Thus, the group replacement is analogous to the replacement of the Lorentz
group by the diffeomorphisms that led Einstein from special relativity to
general relativity, and is also consistent with the assumption of constant
light velocity that led him to special relativity. The enlarged covariance
group leads to a non-commutative geometry based not on a manifold, but on a
nonlocal space in which paths, rather than points, are the most primitive
invariant entities. This yields a theory which unifies the gravitational and
electroweak interactions. The theory contains no adjustable parameters, such as
those that are chosen arbitrarily in the standard model.Comment: 28 pages
Structural Probe of a Glass Forming Liquid: Generalized Compressibility
We introduce a new quantity to probe the glass transition. This quantity is a
linear generalized compressibility which depends solely on the positions of the
particles. We have performed a molecular dynamics simulation on a glass forming
liquid consisting of a two component mixture of soft spheres in three
dimensions. As the temperature is lowered (or as the density is increased), the
generalized compressibility drops sharply at the glass transition, with the
drop becoming more and more abrupt as the measurement time increases. At our
longest measurement times, the drop occurs approximately at the mode coupling
temperature . The drop in the linear generalized compressibility occurs at
the same temperature as the peak in the specific heat. By examining the
inherent structure energy as a function of temperature, we find that our
results are consistent with the kinetic view of the glass transition in which
the system falls out of equilibrium. We find no size dependence and no evidence
for a second order phase transition though this does not exclude the
possibility of a phase transition below the observed glass transition
temperature. We discuss the relation between the linear generalized
compressibility and the ordinary isothermal compressibility as well as the
static structure factor.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, 26 encapsulated postscript figures, revised paper is
shorter, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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