6,722 research outputs found
An imaging gas scintillation proportional counter for the detection of subkiloelectron-volt X-rays
A large area imaging gas scintillation proportional counter (IGSPC) was constructed for use in X-ray astronomy. The IGSPC consists of a gas scintillation proportional counted (GSPC) with a micron polyprotylene window coupled to a multiwire proportional counter (MWPC) via a calcium fluoride window. Over a sensitive area of 21 cu cm the instrument has a measured energy resolution of 17.5% (FWHM) and 1.9 mm (FWHM) spatial resolution at 1.5 keV
Superconducting Nanowires as Nonlinear Inductive Elements for Qubits
We report microwave transmission measurements of superconducting Fabry-Perot
resonators (SFPR), having a superconducting nanowire placed at a supercurrent
antinode. As the plasma oscillation is excited, the supercurrent is forced to
flow through the nanowire. The microwave transmission of the resonator-nanowire
device shows a nonlinear resonance behavior, significantly dependent on the
amplitude of the supercurrent oscillation. We show that such
amplitude-dependent response is due to the nonlinearity of the current-phase
relationship (CPR) of the nanowire. The results are explained within a
nonlinear oscillator model of the Duffing oscillator, in which the nanowire
acts as a purely inductive element, in the limit of low temperatures and low
amplitudes. The low quality factor sample exhibits a "crater" at the resonance
peak at higher driving power, which is due to dissipation. We observe a
hysteretic bifurcation behavior of the transmission response to frequency sweep
in a sample with a higher quality factor. The Duffing model is used to explain
the Duffing bistability diagram. We also propose a concept of a nanowire-based
qubit that relies on the current dependence of the kinetic inductance of a
superconducting nanowire.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figure
Coercive Field and Magnetization Deficit in Ga(1-x)Mn(x)As Epilayers
We have studied the field dependence of the magnetization in epilayers of the
diluted magnetic semiconductor Ga(1-x)Mn(x)As for 0.0135 < x < 0.083.
Measurements of the low temperature magnetization in fields up to 3 T show a
significant deficit in the total moment below that expected for full saturation
of all the Mn spins. These results suggest that the spin state of the
non-ferromagnetic Mn spins is energetically well separated from the
ferromagnetism of the bulk of the spins. We have also studied the coercive
field (Hc) as a function of temperature and Mn concentration, finding that Hc
decreases with increasing Mn concentration as predicted theoretically.Comment: 15 total pages -- 5 text, 1 table, 4 figues. Accepted for publication
in MMM 2002 conference proceedings (APL
Evolution of Fermion Pairing from Three to Two Dimensions
We follow the evolution of fermion pairing in the dimensional crossover from
3D to 2D as a strongly interacting Fermi gas of Li atoms becomes confined
to a stack of two-dimensional layers formed by a one-dimensional optical
lattice. Decreasing the dimensionality leads to the opening of a gap in
radio-frequency spectra, even on the BCS-side of a Feshbach resonance. The
measured binding energy of fermion pairs closely follows the theoretical
two-body binding energy and, in the 2D limit, the zero-temperature mean-field
BEC-BCS theory.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Fabrication and Characterization of Modulation-Doped ZnSe/(Zn,Cd)Se (110) Quantum Wells: A New System for Spin Coherence Studies
We describe the growth of modulation-doped ZnSe/(Zn,Cd)Se quantum wells on
(110) GaAs substrates. Unlike the well-known protocol for the epitaxy of
ZnSe-based quantum structures on (001) GaAs, we find that the fabrication of
quantum well structures on (110) GaAs requires significantly different growth
conditions and sample architecture. We use magnetotransport measurements to
confirm the formation of a two-dimensional electron gas in these samples, and
then measure transverse electron spin relaxation times using time-resolved
Faraday rotation. In contrast to expectations based upon known spin relaxation
mechanisms, we find surprisingly little difference between the spin lifetimes
in these (110)-oriented samples in comparison with (100)-oriented control
samples.Comment: To appear in Journal of Superconductivity (Proceedings of 3rd
Conference on Physics and Applications of Spin-dependent Phenomena in
Semiconductors
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