21 research outputs found

    Negative Absolute Temperatures: 'Hot' Spins in Spontaneous Magnetic Order

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    Depending on the sign of the spin temperature, +-T, in the picokelvin range, antiferro- and ferromagnetic nuclear order in silver are caused by the same interactions. In rhodium, the antiferromagnetic state is preferred both at T > 0 and at T < 0. The lowest and 'highest' temperatures ever produced and measured, 280 pK and -750 pK, have been reached in the course of these experiments. The results on silver, in particular, show that negative temperatures are real, not fictitious quantities.Non Peer reviewe

    Magnetoencephalography—theory, instrumentation, and applications to noninvasive studies of the working human brain

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    Magnetoencephalography (MEG) is a noninvasive technique for investigating neuronal activity in the living human brain. The time resolution of the method is better than 1 ms and the spatial discrimination is, under favorable circumstances, 2-3 mm for sources in the cerebral cortex. In MEG studies, the weak 10 fT-1 pT magnetic fields produced by electric currents flowing in neurons are measured with multichannel SQUID (superconducting quantum interference device) gradiometers. The sites in the cerebral cortex that are activated by a stimulus can be found from the detected magnetic-field distribution, provided that appropriate assumptions about the source render the solution of the inverse problem unique. Many interesting properties of the working human brain can be studied, including spontaneous activity and signal processing following external stimuli. For clinical purposes, determination of the locations of epileptic foci is of interest. The authors begin with a general introduction and a short discussion of the neural basis of MEG. The mathematical theory of the method is then explained in detail, followed by a thorough description of MEG instrumentation, data analysis, and practical construction of multi-SQUID devices. Finally, several MEG experiments performed in the authors' laboratory are described, covering studies of evoked responses and of spontaneous activity in both healthy and diseased brains. Many MEG studies by other groups are discussed briefly as well.Peer reviewe

    NMR Experiments on Rotating Superfluid 3He-A : Evidence for Vorticity

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    Experiments on rotating superfluid 3He-A in an open cylindrical geometry show a change in the NMR line shape as a result of rotation: The amplitude of the peak decreases in proportion to f(T)g(Ω), where Ω is the angular velocity of rotation; at the same time the line broadens. Near Tc, f(T) is a linear function of 1−T/Tc. At small velocities g(Ω)∝Ω. These observations are consistent with the existence of vortices in rotating 3He-A.Peer reviewe

    Vortices in Rotating Superfluid He3

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    For about a century now, physicists have been working hard to extend the temperature range accessible to experimental investigations closer and closer to absolute zero. This endeavor has been amply rewarded by new and fundamentally important discoveries. Completely novel continuous vortices in He3‐A and spontaneously magnetized singular vortices in He3‐B are just two of the many interesting peculiarities of rotating superfluid He3.Peer reviewe

    Low Temperature Laboratory - Annual Report 1970

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    Experimental principles and methods below 1K

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    Low Temperature Laboratory - Annual Report 1969

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