156 research outputs found
Quantum rotational band model for the Heisenberg molecular magnet Mo72Fe30
We derive the low temperature properties of the molecular magnet Mo72Fe30,
where 30 Fe(3+) paramagnetic ions occupy the sites of an icosidodecahedron and
interact via isotropic nearest-neighbour antiferromagnetic Heisenberg exchange.
The key idea of our model (J.S. & M.L.) is that the low-lying excitations form
a sequence of rotational bands, i.e., for each such band the excitation
energies depend quadratically on the total spin quantum number. For
temperatures below 50 mK we predict that the magnetisation is described by a
staircase with 75 equidistant steps as the magnetic field is increased up to a
critical value and saturated for higher fields. For higher temperatures thermal
broadening effects wash out the staircase and yield a linear ramp below the
critical field, and this has been confirmed by our measurements (R.M.). We
demonstrate that the lowest two rotational bands are separated by an energy gap
of 0.7 meV, and this could be tested by EPR and inelastic neutron scattering
measurements. We also predict the occurrence of resonances at temperatures
below 0.1 K in the proton NMR spin-lattice relaxation rate associated with
level crossings. As rotational bands characterize the spectra of many magnetic
molecules our method opens a new road towards a description of their
low-temperature behaviour which is not otherwise accessible.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for Europhysics Letter
Sensitivity Analysis for the Manufacturing of Thermoplastic e-Preforms for Active Textile Reinforced Thermoplastic Composites
AbstractActive fibre-reinforced thermoplastic composites offer a high application potential for lightweight structures capable for series production. By the integration of functional components like material-embedded piezoceramic actuators or sensors the structural behaviour becomes actively controllable and manipulable. Currently, a wide application of such adaptive structures is mainly restricted by the lack of robust manufacture technologies. Therefore, these investigations are performed to develop and realise a novel robust and efficient manufacture process capable for series production. This process bases on a material and actuator adapted hot pressing technique. In this context, special regard is given to the sub process e-preforming. There a thermoplastic film is assembled with thermoplastic compatible piezoceramic modules and the necessary conductive paths. By the development of a special e-preforming unit and the corresponding parameter investigations an adapted manufacture of so called e-preforms can be realised
Josephson Effect in Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov Superconductors
Due to the difference in the momenta of the superconducting order parameters,
the Josephson current in a Josephson junction between a
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) superconductor and a conventional BCS
superconductor is suppressed. We show that the Josephson current may be
recovered by applying a magnetic field in the junction. The field strength and
direction at which the supercurrent recovery occurs depend upon the momentum
and structure of the order parameter in the FFLO state. Thus the Josephson
effect provides an unambiguous way to detect the existence of an FFLO state,
and to measure the momentum of the order parameter.Comment: 4 pages with one embedded eps figur
On the Meissner Effect of the Odd-Frequency Superconductivity with Critical Spin Fluctuations: Possibility of Zero Field FFLO pairing
We investigate the influence of critical spin fluctuations on electromagnetic
responses in the odd-frequency superconductivity. It is shown that the Meissner
kernel of the odd-frequency superconductivity is strongly reduced by the
critical spin fluctuation or the massless spin wave mode in the
antiferromagnetic phase. These results imply that the superfluid density is
reduced, and the London penetration depth is lengthened for the odd-frequency
pairing. It is also shown that the zero field Flude-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov
pairing is spontaneously realized both for even- and odd-frequency in the case
of sufficiently strong coupling with low lying spin-modes.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Supercooling of the disordered vortex lattice in Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8+d
Time-resolved local induction measurements near to the vortex lattice
order-disorder transition in optimally doped
BiSrCaCuO single crystals shows that the
high-field, disordered phase can be quenched to fields as low as half the
transition field. Over an important range of fields, the electrodynamical
behavior of the vortex system is governed by the co-existence of the two phases
in the sample. We interpret the results in terms of supercooling of the
high-field phase and the possible first order nature of the order-disorder
transition at the ``second peak''.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Nature, July 10th, 1999; Rejected
August 8th for lack of broad interest Submitted to Physical Review Letters
September 10th, 199
Color Superconductivity in Compact Stars
After a brief review of the phenomena expected in cold dense quark matter,
color superconductivity and color-flavor locking, we sketch some implications
of recent developments in our understanding of cold dense quark matter for the
physics of compact stars. We give a more detailed summary of our recent work on
crystalline color superconductivity and the consequent realization that (some)
pulsar glitches may originate in quark matter.Comment: 19 pages. 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the ECT Workshop
on Neutron Star Interiors, Trento, Italy, June 2000. Shorter versions
contributed to the proceedings of Strong and Electroweak Matter 2000,
Marseille, France, June 2000 and to the proceedings of Strangeness 2000,
Berkeley, CA, July 2000. KR was the speaker at all three meeting
Crystalline Color Superconductivity
In any context in which color superconductivity arises in nature, it is
likely to involve pairing between species of quarks with differing chemical
potentials. For suitable values of the differences between chemical potentials,
Cooper pairs with nonzero total momentum are favored, as was first realized by
Larkin, Ovchinnikov, Fulde and Ferrell (LOFF). Condensates of this sort
spontaneously break translational and rotational invariance, leading to gaps
which vary periodically in a crystalline pattern. Unlike the original LOFF
state, these crystalline quark matter condensates include both spin zero and
spin one Cooper pairs. We explore the range of parameters for which crystalline
color superconductivity arises in the QCD phase diagram. If in some shell
within the quark matter core of a neutron star (or within a strange quark star)
the quark number densities are such that crystalline color superconductivity
arises, rotational vortices may be pinned in this shell, making it a locus for
glitch phenomena.Comment: 40 pages, LaTeX with eps figs. v2: New paragraph on Ginzburg-Landau
treatment of LOFF phase in section 5. References added. v3: Small changes
only. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov State in Heavy Fermion Superconductors
The Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) state is a novel superconducting
state in a strong magnetic field characterized by the formation of Cooper pairs
with nonzero total momentum (k \uparrow, -k+q \downarrow), instead of the
ordinary BCS pairs (k \uparrow, -k \downarrow). A fascinating aspect of the
FFLO state is that it exhibits inhomogeneous superconducting phases with a
spatially oscillating order parameter and spin polarization. The FFLO state has
been of interest in various research fields, not only in superconductors in
solid state physics, but also in neutral Fermion superfluid of ultracold atomic
gases and in color superconductivity in high energy physics. In spite of
extensive studies of various superconductors, there has been no undisputed
experimental verification of the FFLO state, mainly because of the very
stringent conditions required of the superconducting materials. Among several
classes of materials, certain heavy fermion and organic superconductors are
believed to provide conditions that are favorable to the formation of the FFLO
state. This review presents recent experimental and theoretical developments of
the FFLO state mainly in heavy fermion superconductors. In particular we
address the recently discovered quasi-two-dimensional superconductor CeCoIn_5,
which is a strong candidate for the formation of the FFLO state.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures with jpsf2.cls, to be published in J. Phys. Soc.
Jpn. (Special Topics - Frontiers of Novel Superconductivity in Heavy Fermion
Compounds
Magnetic field - temperature phase diagram of quasi-two-dimensional organic superconductor lambda-(BETS)_2 GaCl_4 studied via thermal conductivity
The thermal conductivity kappa of the quasi-two-dimensional (Q2D) organic
superconductor lambda-(BETS)_2 GaCl_4 was studied in the magnetic field H
applied parallel to the Q2D plane. The phase diagram determined from this bulk
measurement shows notable dependence on the sample quality. In dirty samples
the upper critical field H_{c2} is consistent with the Pauli paramagnetic
limiting, and a sharp change is observed in kappa(H) at H_{c2 parallel}. In
contrast in clean samples H_{c2}(T) shows no saturation towards low
temperatures and the feature in kappa(H) is replaced by two slope changes
reminiscent of second-order transitions. The peculiarity was observed below ~
0.33T_c and disappeared on field inclination to the plane when the orbital
suppression of superconductivity became dominant. This behavior is consistent
with the formation of a superconducting state with spatially modulated order
parameter in clean samples.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, new figure (Fig.5) and references added, title
change
Inhomogeneous Superconductivity in Condensed Matter and QCD
Inhomogeneous superconductivity arises when the species participating in the
pairing phenomenon have different Fermi surfaces with a large enough
separation. In these conditions it could be more favorable for each of the
pairing fermions to stay close to its Fermi surface and, differently from the
usual BCS state, for the Cooper pair to have a non zero total momentum. For
this reason in this state the gap varies in space, the ground state is
inhomogeneous and a crystalline structure might be formed. This situation was
considered for the first time by Fulde, Ferrell, Larkin and Ovchinnikov, and
the corresponding state is called LOFF. The spontaneous breaking of the space
symmetries in the vacuum state is a characteristic feature of this phase and is
associated to the presence of long wave-length excitations of zero mass. The
situation described here is of interest both in solid state and in elementary
particle physics, in particular in Quantum Chromo-Dynamics at high density and
small temperature. In this review we present the theoretical approach to the
LOFF state and its phenomenological applications using the language of the
effective field theories.Comment: RevTex, 83 pages, 26 figures. Submitted to Review of Modern Physic
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