6,698 research outputs found

    Progressive evolution of tunneling characteristics of in-situ fabricated intrinsic Josephson junctions in Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+delta} single crystals

    Full text link
    Stacks of a few intrinsic tunnel junctions were micro-fabricated on the surface of Bi-2212 single crystals. The number of junctions in a stack was tailored by progressively increasing the height of the stack by ion-beam etching, while its tunneling characteristics were measured in-situ in a vacuum chamber for temperatures down to ~13 K. Using this in-situ etching/measurements technique in a single piece of crystal, we systematically excluded any spurious effects arising from variations in the junction parameters and made clear analysis on the following properties of the surface and inner conducting planes. First, the tunneling resistance and the current-voltage curves are scaled by the surface junction resistance. Second, we confirm that the reduction in both the gap and the superconducting transition temperature of the surface conducting plane in contact with a normal metal is not caused by the variation in the doping level, but is caused by the proximity contact. Finally, the main feature of a junction is not affected by the presence of other junctions in a stack in a low bias region.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Charlene J. Sato's "Language Change in a Creole Continuum: Decreolization?"

    Get PDF
    This article is on the process of decreolization in individuals and in social context. It focuses on decreolization from linguistic and sociolinguistic aspects ofthe Hawai'i creole continuum. Sato begins her article by defining the main concept 'decreolization' as "the process through which a creore language gradually merges with its lodfier ranguage, i.e., the standard language ofthe community, as a result ofcreole speakers' increased access to and 'targeting' ofthe latter" (sato, 199r, p. r22). The study of this process is useful because it can reveal the consequences of language contact and the nature of language change

    Suppressed Superconductivity of the Surface Conduction Layer in Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+x_{8+x} Single Crystals Probed by {\it c}-Axis Tunneling Measurements

    Full text link
    We fabricated small-size stacks on the surface of Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+x_{8+x} (BSCCO-2212) single crystals with the bulk transition temperature TcT_c\simeq90 K, each containing a few intrinsic Josephson junctions. Below a critical temperature TcT_c' (\ll TcT_c), we have observed a weakened Josephson coupling between the CuO2_2 superconducting double layer at the crystal surface and the adjacent one located deeper inside a stack. The quasiparticle branch in the IVIV data of the weakened Josephson junction (WJJ) fits well to the tunneling characteristics of a d-wave superconductor(')/insulator/d-wave superconductor (D'ID) junction. Also, the tunneling resistance in the range TcT_c'<<TT<<TcT_c agrees well with the tunneling in a normal metal/insulator/d-wave superconductor (NID) junction. In spite of the suppressed superconductivity at the surface layer the symmetry of the order parameter appears to remain unaffected.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
    corecore