792 research outputs found
NMR and NQR study of pressure-induced superconductivity and the origin of critical-temperature enhancement in the spin-ladder cuprate SrCaCuO
Pressure-induced superconductivity was studied for a spin-ladder cuprate
SrCaCuO using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) under
pressures up to the optimal pressure 3.8 GPa. Pressure application leads to a
transitional change from a spin-gapped state to a Fermi-liquid state at
temperatures higher than . The relaxation rate shows
activated-type behavior at an onset pressure, whereas Korringa-like behavior
becomes predominant at the optimal pressure, suggesting that an increase in the
density of states (DOS) at the Fermi energy leads to enhancement of .
Nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR) spectra suggest that pressure application
causes transfer of holes from the chain to the ladder sites. The transfer of
holes increases DOS below the optimal pressure. A dome-shaped versus
pressure curve arises from naive balance between the transfer of holes and
broadening of the band width
Kondo effect in CeX (X=S, Se, Te) studied by electrical resistivity under high pressure
We have measured the electrical resistivity of cerium monochalcogenices, CeS,
CeSe, and CeTe, under high pressures up to 8 GPa. Pressure dependences of the
antiferromagnetic ordering temperature , crystal field splitting, and
the anomaly of the Kondo effect have been studied to cover the whole
region from the magnetic ordering regime at low pressure to the Fermi liquid
regime at high pressure. initially increases with increasing pressure,
and starts to decrease at high pressure as expected from the Doniach's diagram.
Simultaneously, the behavior in the resistivity is enhanced, indicating
the enhancement of the Kondo effect by pressure. It is also characteristic in
CeX that the crystal field splitting rapidly decreases at a common rate
of K/GPa. This leads to the increase in the degeneracy of the state
and further enhancement of the Kondo effect. It is shown that the pressure
dependent degeneracy of the state is a key factor to understand the
pressure dependence of , Kondo effect, magnetoresistance, and the peak
structure in the temperature dependence of resistivity.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Novel phase transition and the pressure effect in YbFe2Al10-type CeT2Al10 (T=Fe, Ru, Os)
We have succeeded in growing single crystals of orthorhombic CeT2Al10 (T=Fe,
Ru, Os) by Al self-flux method for the first time, and measured the electrical
resistivity at pressures up to 8 GPa, the magnetic susceptibility and specific
heat at ambient pressure. These results indicate that CeT2Al10 belongs to the
heavy fermion compounds. CeRu2Al10 and CeOs2Al10 show a similar phase
transition at T0 = 27.3 and 28.7 K, respectively. The temperature dependences
in the ordered phases are well described by the thermally activated form,
suggesting that partial gap opens over the Fermi surfaces below T0. When
pressure is applied to CeRu2Al10, T0 disappears suddenly between 3 and 4 GPa,
and CeRu2Al10 turns into a Kondo insulator, followed by a metal. The similarity
of CeT2Al10 under respective pressures suggests a scaling relation by some
parameter controlling the unusual physics in these compounds.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Structure and magnetism in nanocrystalline Ca(La)B films
Nanocrystalline films of La-doped CaB have been fabricated by using a
rf-magnetron sputtering. Lattice expansion of up to 6% with respect to the bulk
value was observed along the direction perpendicular to the film plane, which
arises from the trapping of Ar gas into the film. Large ferromagnetic moment of
3 ~ 4 Bohr magneton per La has been observed in some La-doped films only when
the lattice expansion rate is larger than 2.5%.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in J. Magn. Magn. Mate
Ionization Source of a Minor-axis Cloud in the Outer Halo of M82
The M82 `cap' is a gas cloud at a projected radius of 11.6 kpc along the
minor axis of this well known superwind source. The cap has been detected in
optical line emission and X-ray emission and therefore provides an important
probe of the wind energetics. In order to investigate the ionization source of
the cap, we observed it with the Kyoto3DII Fabry-Perot instrument mounted on
the Subaru Telescope. Deep continuum, Ha, [NII]6583/Ha, and [SII]6716,6731/Ha
maps were obtained with sub-arcsecond resolution. The superior spatial
resolution compared to earlier studies reveals a number of bright Ha emitting
clouds within the cap. The emission line widths (< 100 km s^-1 FWHM) and line
ratios in the newly identified knots are most reasonably explained by slow to
moderate shocks velocities (v_shock = 40--80 km s^-1) driven by a fast wind
into dense clouds. The momentum input from the M82 nuclear starburst region is
enough to produce the observed shock. Consequently, earlier claims of
photoionization by the central starburst are ruled out because they cannot
explain the observed fluxes of the densest knots unless the UV escape fraction
is very high (f_esc > 60%), i.e., an order of magnitude higher than observed in
dwarf galaxies to date. Using these results, we discuss the evolutionary
history of the M82 superwind. Future UV/X-ray surveys are expected to confirm
that the temperature of the gas is consistent with our moderate shock model.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; Accepted for publication in Ap
Pressure-induced changes in the magnetic and valence state of EuFe2As2
We present the results of electrical resistivity, ac specific heat, magnetic
susceptibility, X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and X-ray magnetic circular
dichroism (XMCD) of the ternary iron arsenide EuFe2As2 single crystal under
pressure. Applying pressure leads to a continuous suppression of the
antiferromagnetism associated with Fe moments and the antiferromagnetic
transition temperature becomes zero in the vicinity of a critical pressure Pc
~2.5-2.7 GPa. Pressure-induced re-entrant superconductivity, which is highly
sensitive to the homogeneity of the pressure, only appears in the narrow
pressure region in the vicinity of Pc due to the competition between
superconductivity and the antiferromagnetic ordering of Eu2+ moments. The
antiferromagnetic state of Eu2+ moments changes to the ferromagnetic state
above 6 GPa. We also found that the ferromagnetic order is suppressed with
further increasing pressure, which is connected with a valence change of Eu
ions.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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