13,349 research outputs found

    Antiferromagnetism in NiO Observed by Transmission Electron Diffraction

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    Neutron diffraction has been used to investigate antiferromagnetism since 1949. Here we show that antiferromagnetic reflections can also be seen in transmission electron diffraction patterns from NiO. The diffraction patterns taken here came from regions as small as 10.5 nm and such patterns could be used to form an image of the antiferromagnetic structure with a nanometre resolution.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Typos corrected. To appear in Physical Review Letter

    Electromotive forces and the Meissner effect puzzle

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    In a voltaic cell, positive (negative) ions flow from the low (high) potential electrode to the high (low) potential electrode, driven by an `electromotive force' which points in opposite direction and overcomes the electric force. Similarly in a superconductor charge flows in direction opposite to that dictated by the Faraday electric field as the magnetic field is expelled in the Meissner effect. The puzzle is the same in both cases: what drives electric charges against electromagnetic forces? I propose that the answer is also the same in both cases: kinetic energy lowering, or `quantum pressure'

    Determining R-parity violating parameters from neutrino and LHC data

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    In supersymmetric models neutrino data can be explained by R-parity violating operators which violate lepton number by one unit. The so called bilinear model can account for the observed neutrino data and predicts at the same time several decay properties of the lightest supersymmetric particle. In this paper we discuss the expected precision to determine these parameters by combining neutrino and LHC data and discuss the most important observables. We show that one can expect a rather accurate determination of the underlying R-parity parameters assuming mSUGRA relations between the R-parity conserving ones and discuss briefly also the general MSSM as well as the expected accuracies in case of a prospective e+ e- linear collider. An important observation is that several parameters can only be determined up to relative signs or more generally relative phases.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure

    Book Reviews

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    THE PHILANTHROPOIDS: FOUNDATIONS AND SOCIETY. By Ben Whitaker. New York: William Morrow & Company, 1974. Pp. 256. 7.95.CONGLOMERATESUNLIMITED:THEFAILUREOFREGULATION.ByJohnF.Winslow.Bloomington:IndianaUniversityPress,1973.Pp.xx,296.7.95. CONGLOMERATES UNLIMITED: THE FAILURE OF REGULATION. By John F. Winslow. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1973. Pp. xx, 296. 10.00. BEFORE THE LAW: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE LEGAL PROCESS. Edited by John J. Bonsignore, Ethan Katsh, Peter d\u27Errico, Ronald M. Pipkin and Stephen Arons. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1974. Pp. xii, 388.,$6.95

    Buried dislocation networks designed to organize the growth of III-V semiconductor nanostructures

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    We first report a detailed transmission electron microscopy study of dislocation networks (DNs) formed at shallowly buried interfaces obtained by bonding two GaAs crystals between which we establish in a controlled manner a twist and a tilt around a k110l direction. For large enough twists, the DN consists of a twodimensional network of screw dislocations accommodating mainly the twist and of a one-dimensional network of mixed dislocations accommodating mainly the tilt. We show that in addition the mixed dislocations accommodate part of the twist and we observe and explain slight unexpected disorientations of the screw dislocations with respect to the k110l directions. By performing a quantitative analysis of the whole DN, we propose a coherent interpretation of these observations which also provides data inaccessible by direct experiments. When the twist is small enough, one screw subnetwork vanishes. The surface strain field induced by such DNs has been used to pilot the lateral ordering of GaAs and InGaAs nanostructures during metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy. We prove that the dimensions and orientations of the nanostructures are correlated with those of the cells of the underlying DN and explain how the interface dislocation structure governs the formation of the nanostructures

    Probing Neutrino Oscillations in Supersymmetric Models at the Large Hadron Collider

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    The lightest supersymmetric particle may decay with branching ratios that correlate with neutrino oscillation parameters. In this case the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has the potential to probe the atmospheric neutrino mixing angle with sensitivity competitive to its low-energy determination by underground experiments. Under realistic detection assumptions, we identify the necessary conditions for the experiments at CERN's LHC to probe the simplest scenario for neutrino masses induced by minimal supergravity with bilinear R parity violation.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. To appear in Physical Review
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