8 research outputs found
Parametric Amplification of Nonlinear Response of Single Crystal Niobium
Giant enhancement of the nonlinear response of a single crystal Nb sample,
placed in {\it a pumping ac magnetic field}, has been observed experimentally.
The experimentally observed amplitude of the output signal is about three
orders of magnitude higher than that seen without parametric pumping. The
theoretical analysis based on the extended double well potential model provides
a qualitative explanation of the experimental results as well as new
predictions of two bifurcations for specific values of the pumping signal.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
The internal magnetic field in superconducting ferromagnets
We have measured the nonlinear response to the ac magnetic field in the
superconducting weak ferromagnet Ru-1222, at different regimes of sample
cooling which provides unambiguous evidence of the interplay of the domain
structure and the vorticity in the superconducting state. This is {\em direct}
proof of coexistence of ferromagnetic and superconductive order parameters in
high- ruthenocuprates.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
The low-frequency response in the surface superconducting state of ZrB single crystal}
The large nonlinear response of a single crystal ZrB to an ac field
(frequency 40 - 2500 Hz) for has been observed. Direct
measurements of the ac wave form and the exact numerical solution of the
Ginzburg-Landau equations, as well as phenomenological relaxation equation,
permit the study of the surface superconducting states dynamics. It is shown,
that the low frequency response is defined by transitions between the
metastable superconducting states under the action of an ac field. The
relaxation rate which determines such transitions dynamics, is found.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figure
Microwave emission from superconducting vortices in Mo/Si superlattices
Most of superconductors in a magnetic field are penetrated by a lattice of quantized flux vortices. In the presence of a transport current causing the vortices to cross sample edges, emission of electromagnetic waves is expected due to the continuity of tangential components of the fields at the surface. Yet, such a radiation has not been observed so far due to low radiated power levels and lacking coherence in the vortex motion. Here, we clearly evidence the emission of electromagnetic waves from vortices crossing the layers of a superconductor/insulator Mo/Si superlattice. The emission spectra consist of narrow harmonically related peaks which can be finely tuned in the GHz range by the dc bias current and, coarsely, by the in-plane magnetic field value. Our findings show that superconductor/insulator superlattices can act as dc-tunable microwave generators bridging the frequency gap between conventional radiofrequency oscillators and (sub-)terahertz generators relying upon the Josephson effect