12,026 research outputs found
Interplay between different states in heavy fermion physics
Calorimetry experiments under high pressure were used to clarify the
interplay between different states such as superconductivity and
antiferromagnetism in CeRhIn5, spin density wave and large moment
antiferromagnetism in URu2Si2. Evidences are given on the re-entrance of
antiferromagnetism under magnetic field in the superconducting phase of CeRhIn5
up to pc = 2.5 GPa where the Neel temperature will collapse in the absence of
superconductivity. For URu2Si2 measurements up to 10 GPa support strongly the
coexistence of spin density wave and large moment antiferromagnetism at high
pressures.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, presented at ICM200
Superconductivity at T_c ~ 14 K in Single Crystalline FeTeSe
Single crystalline FeTeSe with a sharp superconducting
transition at 14 K is synthesized via slow furnace
cooling followed by low-temperature annealing. The effect of annealing on the
chemical and superconducting inhomogeneities is carefully characterized. We
also report resistivity, magnetization, and magneto-optical images of this
crystal. Based on the Bean model, critical current density is estimated to
exceed A/cm below 5 K under zero field. Weak fish-tail
effect is identified at lower temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
SU(3) lattice QCD study for octet and decuplet baryon spectra
The spectra of octet and decuplet baryons are studied using SU(3) lattice QCD
at the quenched level. As an implementation to reduce the statistical
fluctuation, we employ the anisotropic lattice with improved quark
action. In relation to , we measure also the mass of the SU(3)
flavor-singlet negative-parity baryon, which is described as a three quark
state in the quenched lattice QCD, and its lowest mass is measured about 1.6
GeV. Since the experimentally observed negative-parity baryon
is much lighter than 1.6 GeV, may include a large component of
a bound state rather than the three quark state. The mass splitting
between the octet and the decuplet baryons are also discussed in terms of the
current quark mass.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, proceeding of "International Symposium on Hadron
and Nuclei" at Yonsei Univ., Seoul, Korea 20-22 Feb. 200
Cloud optical thickness and effective particle radius derived from transmitted solar radiation measurements : Comparison with cloud radar observations
A method is presented for determining the optical thickness and effective particle radius of stratiform clouds containing liquid water drops in the absence of drizzle from transmitted solar radiation measurements. The procedure compares measurements of the cloud transmittance from the ground at water-absorbing and nonabsorbing wavelengths with lookup tables of the transmittance precomputed for plane-parallel, vertically homogeneous clouds. The optical thickness derived from the cloud transmittance may be used to retrieve vertical profiles of cloud microphysics in combination with the radar reflectivity factor. To do this, we also present an algorithm for solving the radar equation with a constraint of the optical thickness at the visible wavelength. Observations of clouds were made in August and September 2003 at Koganei, Tokyo, Japan, using a PREDE i-skyradiometer and a 95-GHz cloud radar Super Polarimetric Ice Crystal Detection and Explication Radar (SPIDER). The optical thickness and effective radius of water clouds were derived from the i-skyradiometer. Then, the vertical profile of the effective radius was retrieved from SPIDER, using the optical thickness determined from the i-skyradiometer. We found that the effective radii derived by using these two instruments were in good agreement
Geometric and combinatorial realizations of crystal graphs
For irreducible integrable highest weight modules of the finite and affine
Lie algebras of type A and D, we define an isomorphism between the geometric
realization of the crystal graphs in terms of irreducible components of
Nakajima quiver varieties and the combinatorial realizations in terms of Young
tableaux and Young walls. For affine type A, we extend the Young wall
construction to arbitrary level, describing a combinatorial realization of the
crystals in terms of new objects which we call Young pyramids.Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures; v2: minor typos corrected; v3: corrections to
section 8; v4: minor typos correcte
Current-feedback-stabilized laser system for quantum simulation experiments using Yb clock transition at 578 nm
We developed a laser system for the spectroscopy of the clock transition in
ytterbium (Yb) atoms at 578 nm based on an interference-filter stabilized
external-cavity diode laser (IFDL) emitting at 1156 nm. Owing to the improved
frequency-to-current response of the laser-diode chip and the less sensitivity
of the IFDL to mechanical perturbations, we succeeded in stabilizing the
frequency to a high-finesse ultra-low-expansion glass cavity with a simple
current feedback system. Using this laser system, we performed high-resolution
clock spectroscopy of Yb and found that the linewidth of the stabilized laser
was less than 320 Hz.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Excitation spectrum of Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems
Excitation spectra in bilayer quantum Hall systems at total Landau-level
filling are studied by the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approximation. The
systems have the spin degrees of freedom in addition to the layer degrees of
freedom described in terms of pseudospin. On the excitation spectra from
spin-unpolarized and pseudospin-polarized ground state, this approximation
fully preserves the spin rotational symmetry and thus can give not only
spin-triplet but also spin-singlet excitations systematically. It is also found
that the ground-state properties are well described by this approximation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; conference: EP2DS-1
Inverted Hybrid Inflation as a solution to gravitino problems in Gravity Mediation
It was recently found that the decay of inflaton and the SUSY breaking field
produces many gravitinos in the gravity mediation scenario. These discoveries
led to an exclusion of many inflation models such as chaotic, (smooth) hybrid,
topological and new inflation models. Under these circumstances we searched for
a successful inflation model and found that the ``inverted'' hybrid inflation
models can solve the gravitino overproduction problem by their distinctive
shape of the potential. Furthermore, we found that this inflation model
simultaneously can explain the observed baryon asymmetry through the
non-thermal leptogenesis and is consistent with the WMAP results, that is,
and the negligible tensor to scalar ratio.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures in
- …