4,359 research outputs found
High-pressure study of the basal-plane anisotropy of the upper critical field of the topological superconductor SrxBi2Se3
We report a high-pressure transport study of the upper-critical field,
, of the topological superconductor SrBiSe ( K). was measured for magnetic fields directed along two
orthogonal directions, and , in the trigonal basal plane. While
superconductivity is rapidly suppressed at the critical pressure
GPa, the pronounced two-fold basal-plane anisotropy at K, recently reported at ambient pressure (Pan et al., 2016), is
reinforced and attains a value of at the highest pressure (2.2 GPa).
The data reveal that the unconventional superconducting state with broken
rotational symmetry is robust under pressure
Angular variation of the magnetoresistance of the superconducting ferromagnet UCoGe
We report a magnetoresistance study of the superconducting ferromagnet UCoGe.
The data, taken on single-crystalline samples, show a pronounced structure at
~T for a field applied along the ordered moment . Angle
dependent measurements reveal this field-induced phenomenon has an uniaxial
anisotropy. Magnetoresistance measurements under pressure show a rapid increase
of to 12.8~T at 1.0~GPa. We discuss in terms of a field induced
polarization change. Upper critical field measurements corroborate the unusual
S-shaped -curve for a field along the -axis of the orthorhombic
unit cell.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Superconductivity and magnetic order in the non-centrosymmetric Half Heusler compound ErPdBi
We report superconductivity at K and magnetic order at K in the semi-metallic noncentrosymmetric Half Heusler compound ErPdBi.
The upper critical field, , has an unusual quasi-linear temperature
variation and reaches a value of 1.6 T for . Magnetic order is
found below and is suppressed at T for . Since , the interaction of superconductivity and magnetism
is expected to give rise to a complex ground state. Moreover, electronic
structure calculations show ErPdBi has a topologically nontrivial band
inversion and thus may serve as a new platform to study the interplay of
topological states, superconductivity and magnetic order.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
Socio-economic status over the life-course and depressive symptoms in men and women in Eastern Europe
Objective: Research into social inequalities in depression has studied western populations but data from non-western countries are sparse. In this paper, we investigate the extent of social inequalities in depression in Eastern Europe, the relative importance of social position at different points of the life-course, and whether social patterning of depression differs between men and women.Method: A cross-sectional study examined 12,053 men and 13,582 women in Russia, Poland and the Czech Republic. Depressive symptoms (16 or above on the CESD-20) were examined in relation to socio-economic circumstances at three phases of the life-course: childhood (household amenities and father's education); own education; current circumstances (financial difficulties and possession of household items).Results: Pronounced social differences in depression exist in men and women throughout Eastern Europe. Depression was largely influenced by current circumstances rather than by early life or education, with effects stronger in Poland and Russia. Odds ratios in men for current disadvantage were 3.16 [95% CI: 2.57-3.89], 3.16 [2.74-3.64] and 2.17 [1.80-2.63] in Russia, Poland and the Czech Republic respectively. Social variables did not explain the female excess in depression, which varied from 2.91 [2.58-3.27] in Russia to 1.90 [1.74-2.08] in Poland. Men were more affected by adult disadvantage than women, leading to narrower sex differentials in the presence of disadvantage.Limitations: Cross-sectional data with recall of childhood conditions were used.Conclusion: Current social circumstances are the strongest influence on increased depressive symptoms in countries which have recently experienced social changes. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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