7,192 research outputs found
Effect of random disorder and spin frustration on the reentrant spin glass phase and ferromagnetic phase in stage-2 Cu_{0.93}Co_{0.07}Cl_{2} graphite intercalation compound near the multicritical point
Stage-2 CuCoCl graphite intercalation compound
magnetically behaves like a reentrant ferromagnet near the multicritical point
(). It undergoes two magnetic phase transitions at
( K) and ( K). The static
and dynamic nature of the ferromagnetic and reentrant spin glass phase has been
studied using DC and AC magnetic susceptibility. Characteristic memory
phenomena of the DC susceptibility are observed at and . The
nonlinear AC susceptibility has a positive local maximum at
, and a negative local minimum at . The relaxation time
between and shows a critical slowing down: with and sec. The
influence of the random disorder on the critical behavior above is
clearly observed: , , and . The
exponent of is far from that of 3D Heisenberg model.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Radiation Transfer in the Cavity and Shell of Planetary Nebulae
We develop an approximate analytical solution for the transfer of
line-averaged radiation in the hydrogen recombination lines for the ionized
cavity and molecular shell of a spherically symmetric planetary nebula. The
scattering problem is treated as a perturbation, using a mean intensity derived
from a scattering-free solution. The analytical function was fitted to Halpha
and Hbeta data from the planetary nebula NGC6537. The position of the maximum
in the intensity profile produced consistent values for the radius of the
cavity as a fraction of the radius of the dusty nebula: 0.21 for Halpha and
0.20 for Hbeta. Recovered optical depths were broadly consistent with observed
optical extinction in the nebula, but the range of fit parameters in this case
is evidence for a clumpy distribution of dust.Comment: MNRAS accepted; 10 Fig
The timing and location of dust formation in the remnant of SN 1987A
The discovery with the {\it Herschel Space Observatory} of bright far
infrared and submm emission from the ejecta of the core collapse supernova
SN\,1987A has been interpreted as indicating the presence of some
0.4--0.7\,M of dust. We have constructed radiative transfer models of
the ejecta to fit optical to far-infrared observations from the literature at
epochs between 615 days and 24 years after the explosion, to determine when and
where this unexpectedly large amount of dust formed.
We find that the observations by day 1153 are consistent with the presence of
310M of dust. Although this is a larger amount than has
previously been considered possible at this epoch, it is still very small
compared to the amount present in the remnant after 24 years, and significantly
higher dust masses at the earlier epochs are firmly ruled out by the
observations, indicating that the majority of the dust must have formed at very
late times. By 8515-9200 days after the explosion, 0.6--0.8\,M of dust
is present, and dust grains with radii greater than 2\,m are required to
obtain a fit to the observed SED. This suggests that the dust mass increase at
late times was caused by accretion onto and coagulation of the dust grains
formed at earlier epochs.
These findings provide further confirmation that core collapse supernovae can
create large quantities of dust, and indicate that the reason for small dust
masses being estimated in many cases is that the vast majority of the dust
forms long after most supernovae have been detectable at mid-infrared
wavelengths.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Aharonov-Bohm Effect at liquid-nitrogen temperature: Frohlich superconducting quantum device
The Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect has been accepted and has promoted
interdisciplinary scientific activities in modern physics. To observe the AB
effect in condensed matter physics, the whole system needs to maintain phase
coherence, in a tiny ring of the diameter 1 micrometer and at low temperatures
below 1 K. We report that AB oscillations have been measured at high
temperature 79 K by use of charge-density wave (CDW) loops in TaS3 ring
crystals. CDW condensate maintained macroscopic quantum coherence, which
extended over the ring circumference 85 micrometer. The periodicity of the
oscillations is h/2e in accuracy within a 10 percent range. The observation of
the CDW AB effect implies Frohlich superconductivity in terms of macroscopic
coherence and will provide a novel quantum interference device running at room
temperature.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Dislocation model for aseismic fault slip in the transverse ranges of Southern California
Geodetic data at a plate boundary can reveal the pattern of subsurface displacements that accompany plate motion. These displacements are modelled as the sum of rigid block motion and the elastic effects of frictional interaction between blocks. The frictional interactions are represented by uniform dislocation on each of several rectangular fault patches. The block velocities and fault parameters are then estimated from geodetic data. Bayesian inversion procedure employs prior estimates based on geological and seismological data. The method is applied to the Transverse Ranges, using prior geological and seismological data and geodetic data from the USGS trilateration networks. Geodetic data imply a displacement rate of about 20 mm/yr across the San Andreas Fault, while the geologic estimates exceed 30 mm/yr. The prior model and the final estimates both imply about 10 mm/yr crustal shortening normal to the trend of the San Andreas Fault. Aseismic fault motion is a major contributor to plate motion. The geodetic data can help to identify faults that are suffering rapid stress accumulation; in the Transverse Ranges those faults are the San Andreas and the Santa Susana
VLT observations of the asymmetric Etched Hourglass Nebula, MyCn 18
Context. The mechanisms that form extreme bipolar planetary nebulae remain
unclear. Aims. The physical properties, structure, and dynamics of the bipolar
planetary nebula, MyCn 18, are investigated in detail with the aim of
understanding the shaping mechanism and evolutionary history of this object.
Methods. VLT infrared images, VLT ISAAC infrared spectra, and long-slit optical
Echelle spectra are used to investigate MyCn 18. Morpho-kinematic modelling was
used to firmly constrain the structure and kinematics of the source. A
timescale analysis was used to determine the kinematical age of the nebula and
its main components. Results. A spectroscopic study of MyCn 18's central and
offset region reveals the detailed make-up of its nebular composition.
Molecular hydrogen, atomic helium, and Bracket gamma emission are detected from
the central regions of MyCn 18. ISAAC spectra from a slit position along the
narrow waist of the nebula demonstrate that the ionised gas resides closer to
the centre of the nebula than the molecular emission. A kinematical age of the
nebula and its components were obtained by the P-V arrays and timescale
analysis. Conclusions. The structure and kinematics of MyCn 18 are better
understood using an interactive 3-D modelling tool called shape. A dimensional
and timescale analysis of MyCn 18's major components provides a possible
mechanism for the nebula's asymmetry. The putative central star is somewhat
offset from the geometric centre of the nebula, which is thought to be the
result of a binary system. We speculate that the engulfing and destruction of
an exoplanet during the AGB phase may have been a key event in shaping MyCn 18
and generating of its hypersonic knotty outflow.Comment: 15 pages, 3 tables, 13 figures. Accepted for publication by A&
A Microscopic Mechanism for Muscle's Motion
The SIRM (Stochastic Inclined Rods Model) proposed by H. Matsuura and M.
Nakano can explain the muscle's motion perfectly, but the intermolecular
potential between myosin head and G-actin is too simple and only repulsive
potential is considered. In this paper we study the SIRM with different complex
potential and discuss the effect of the spring on the system. The calculation
results show that the spring, the effective radius of the G-actin and the
intermolecular potential play key roles in the motion. The sliding speed is
about calculated from the model which well agrees with
the experimental data.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Identifications and SEDs of the detected sources from the AKARI Deep Field South
In order to find counterparts of the detected objects in the AKARI Deep Field
South (ADFS) in all available wavelengths, we searched public databases (NED,
SIMBAD and others). Checking 500 sources brighter than 0.0482 Jy in the AKARI
Wide-S band, we found 114 sources with possible counterparts, among which 78
were known galaxies. We present these sources as well as our first attempt to
construct spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for the most secure and most
interesting sources among them, taking into account all the known data together
with the AKARI measurements in four bands.Comment: 4 pages, 10 figures, To appear in: the proceedings of the conference
"AKARI, a light to illuminate the misty Universe", February 16-19 2009, Toky
Anisotropic magnetic diffuse scattering in an easy-plane type antiferromagnet ErNiGe
We report on neutron scattering studies of a rare earth intermetallic
compound ErNiGe. Polarized neutron scattering experiments revealed
that the magnetic ordered moment lies in ab-plane. Taking account of
a lack of the third higher harmonic reflection, ErNiGe is
considered to have a helical magnetic structure. The magnetic scattering
profiles along the - and the -directions are well
described by the sum of Gaussian and modified-Lorentzian terms, even far below
, indicating that short-range orders coexist with a
long-range order. Interestingly, the modified-Lorentzian-type diffuse
scattering is not present in the profiles along the -direction.
The anisotropy of the diffuse scattering suggests that the short-range-order
consists of one dimensional long-range helices along the c-axis.Comment: 4 pages, to be published in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter (HFM2008
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