1,382 research outputs found
Theory of Double-Sided Flux Decorations
A novel two-sided Bitter decoration technique was recently employed by Yao et
al. to study the structure of the magnetic vortex array in high-temperature
superconductors. Here we discuss the analysis of such experiments. We show that
two-sided decorations can be used to infer {\it quantitative} information about
the bulk properties of flux arrays, and discuss how a least squares analysis of
the local density differences can be used to bring the two sides into registry.
Information about the tilt, compressional and shear moduli of bulk vortex
configurations can be extracted from these measurements.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures not included (to request send email to
[email protected]
Interstitials, Vacancies and Dislocations in Flux-Line Lattices: A Theory of Vortex Crystals, Supersolids and Liquids
We study a three dimensional Abrikosov vortex lattice in the presence of an
equilibrium concentration of vacancy, interstitial and dislocation loops.
Vacancies and interstitials renormalize the long-wavelength bulk and tilt
elastic moduli. Dislocation loops lead to the vanishing of the long-wavelength
shear modulus. The coupling to vacancies and interstitials - which are always
present in the liquid state - allows dislocations to relax stresses by climbing
out of their glide plane. Surprisingly, this mechanism does not yield any
further independent renormalization of the tilt and compressional moduli at
long wavelengths. The long wavelength properties of the resulting state are
formally identical to that of the ``flux-line hexatic'' that is a candidate
``normal'' hexatically ordered vortex liquid state.Comment: 21 RevTeX pgs, 7 eps figures uuencoded; corrected typos, published
versio
Localized Flux Lines and the Bose Glass
Columnar defects provide effective pinning centers for magnetic flux lines in
high-- superconductors. Utilizing a mapping of the statistical
mechanics of directed lines to the quantum mechanics of two--dimensional
bosons, one expects an entangled flux liquid phase at high temperatures,
separated by a second--order localization transition from a low--temperature
``Bose glass'' phase with infinite tilt modulus. Recent decoration experiments
have demonstrated that below the matching field the repulsive forces between
the vortices may be sufficiently large to produce strong spatial correlations
in the Bose glass. This is confirmed by numerical simulations, and a remarkably
wide soft ``Coulomb gap'' at the chemical potential is found in the
distribution of pinning energies. At low currents, the dominant transport
mechanism in the Bose glass phase proceeds via the formation of double kinks
between not necessarily adjacent columnar pins, similar to variable--range
hopping in disordered semiconductors. The strong correlation effects
originating in the long--range vortex interactions drastically reduce
variable--range hopping transport.Comment: 10 pages, latex ("lamuphys.sty" file included), 6 figures can be
obtained from the author ([email protected]); to appear in Proc. XIV
Sitges conference on "Complex Behaviour of Glassy Systems" (Springer--Verlag
Fluctuations and Intrinsic Pinning in Layered Superconductors
A flux liquid can condense into a smectic crystal in a pure layered
superconductors with the magnetic field oriented nearly parallel to the layers.
If the smectic order is commensurate with the layering, this crystal is {\sl
stable} to point disorder. By tilting and adjusting the magnitude of the
applied field, both incommensurate and tilted smectic and crystalline phases
are found. We discuss transport near the second order smectic freezing
transition, and show that permeation modes lead to a small non--zero
resistivity and large but finite tilt modulus in the smectic crystal.Comment: 4 pages + 1 style file + 1 figure (as uufile) appended, REVTEX 3.
Effective phase description of noise-perturbed and noise-induced oscillations
An effective description of a general class of stochastic phase oscillators
is presented. For this, the effective phase velocity is defined either by
invariant probability density or via first passage times. While the first
approach exhibits correct frequency and distribution density, the second one
yields proper phase resetting curves. Their discrepancy is most pronounced for
noise-induced oscillations and is related to non-monotonicity of the phase
fluctuations
Universality of Frequency and Field Scaling of the Conductivity Measured by Ac-Susceptibility of a Ybco-Film
Utilizing a novel and exact inversion scheme, we determine the complex linear
conductivity from the linear magnetic ac-susceptibility
which has been measured from 3\,mHz to 50\,MHz in fields between 0.4\,T and
4\,T applied parallel to the c-axis of a 250\,nm thin disk. The frequency
derivative of the phase and the dynamical scaling of
above and below provide clear evidence for a
continuous phase transition at to a generic superconducting state. Based
on the vortex-glass scaling model, the resulting critical exponents and
are close to those frequently obtained on films by other means and
associated with an 'isotropic' vortex glass. The field effect on
can be related to the increase of the glass coherence length,
.Comment: 8 pages (5 figures upon request), revtex 3.0, APK.94.01.0
Dynamics of rotating Bose-Einstein condensates probed by Bragg scattering
Gaseous Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) have become an important test bed
for studying the dynamics of quantized vortices. In this work we use two-photon
Doppler sensitive Bragg scattering to study the rotation of sodium BECs. We
analyze the microscopic flow field and present laboratory measurements of the
coarse-grained velocity profile. Unlike time-of-flight imaging, Bragg
scattering is sensitive to the direction of rotation and therefore to the phase
of the condensate. In addition, we have non-destructively probed the vortex
flow field using a sequence of two Bragg pulses.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Invited paper submitted to a special issue on
"Nonlinear Waves" of the (Elsevier) journal 'Math. Comput. Simul.', for
participants in the 4th IMACS International Conference on Nonlinear Evolution
Equations and Wave Phenomena (2005). Visit our website at
http://www.physics.gatech.edu/chandra for additional informatio
Properties of the Bose glass phase in irradiated superconductors near the matching field
Structural and transport properties of interacting localized flux lines in
the Bose glass phase of irradiated superconductors are studied by means of
Monte Carlo simulations near the matching field B_Phi, where the densities of
vortices and columnar defects are equal. For a completely random columnar pin
distribution in the xy-plane transverse to the magnetic field, our results show
that the repulsive vortex interactions destroy the Mott insulator phase which
was predicted to occur at B = B_Phi. On the other hand, for ratios of the
penetration depth to average defect distance lambda/d <= 1, characteristic
remnants of the Mott insulator singularities remain visible in experimentally
accessible quantities as the magnetization, the bulk modulus, and the
magnetization relaxation, when B is varied near B_Phi. For spatially more
regular disorder, e.g., a nearly triangular defect distribution, we find that
the Mott insulator phase can survive up to considerably large interaction range
\lambda/d, and may thus be observable in experiments.Comment: RevTex, 17 pages, eps files for 12 figures include
Exact results for the reactivity of a single-file system
We derive analytical expressions for the reactivity of a Single-File System
with fast diffusion and adsorption and desorption at one end. If the conversion
reaction is fast, then the reactivity depends only very weakly on the system
size, and the conversion is about 100%. If the reaction is slow, then the
reactivity becomes proportional to the system size, the loading, and the
reaction rate constant. If the system size increases the reactivity goes to the
geometric mean of the reaction rate constant and the rate of adsorption and
desorption. For large systems the number of nonconverted particles decreases
exponentially with distance from the adsorption/desorption end.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Test of Replica Theory: Thermodynamics of 2D Model Systems with Quenched Disorder
We study the statistics of thermodynamic quantities in two related systems
with quenched disorder: A (1+1)-dimensional planar lattice of elastic lines in
a random potential and the 2-dimensional random bond dimer model. The first
system is examined by a replica-symmetric Bethe ansatz (RBA) while the latter
is studied numerically by a polynomial algorithm which circumvents slow glassy
dynamics. We establish a mapping of the two models which allows for a detailed
comparison of RBA predictions and simulations. Over a wide range of disorder
strength, the effective lattice stiffness and cumulants of various
thermodynamic quantities in both approaches are found to agree excellently. Our
comparison provides, for the first time, a detailed quantitative confirmation
of the replica approach and renders the planar line lattice a unique testing
ground for concepts in random systems.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
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