265 research outputs found
Magnon Bose condensation in symmetry breaking magnetic field
Magnon Bose condensation (BC)in the symmetry breaking magnetic field is a
result of unusual form of the Zeeman energy, which has terms linear in the
spin-wave operators and terms mixing excitations differ in the Wave-vector of
the magnetic structure. The following examples are considered: simple
easy-plane tetragonal antiferromagnets (AF), frustrated AF family
where etc. and cubic magnets with the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interaction ( etc.). In all cases the BC becomes important when the
magnetic field becomes comparable with the spin-wave gap. The theory is
illustrated by existing experimental results.Comment: Submitted to J. of Phys. Condens. Matter (Proceedings of
International Conference "Highly Frustrated Magnets", Osaka (Japan), August
2006). 8 pages, 5 figure
Ultrasonic studies of the magnetic phase transition in MnSi
Measurements of the sound velocities in a single crystal of MnSi were
performed in the temperature range 4-150 K. Elastic constants, controlling
propagation of longitudinal waves reveal significant softening at a temperature
of about 29.6 K and small discontinuities at 28.8 K, which corresponds to
the magnetic phase transition in MnSi. In contrast the shear elastic moduli do
not show any softening at all, reacting only to the small volume deformation
caused by the magneto-volume effect. The current ultrasonic study exposes an
important fact that the magnetic phase transition in MnSi, occurring at 28.8 K,
is just a minor feature of the global transformation marked by the rounded
maxima or minima of heat capacity, thermal expansion coefficient, sound
velocities and absorption, and the temperature derivative of resistivity.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Dissociative photoionization of NO across a shape resonance in the XUV range using circularly polarized synchrotron radiation.
We report benchmark results for dissociative photoionization (DPI) spectroscopy and dynamics of the NO molecule in the region of the σ* shape resonance in the ionization leading to the NO+(c3Π) ionic state. The experimental study combines well characterized extreme ultraviolet (XUV) circularly polarized synchrotron radiation, delivered at the DESIRS beamline (SOLEIL), with ion-electron coincidence 3D momentum spectroscopy. The measured (N+, e) kinetic energy correlation diagrams reported at four discrete photon energies in the extended 23-33 eV energy range allow for resolving the different active DPI reactions and underline the importance of spectrally resolved studies using synchrotron radiation in the context of time-resolved studies where photoionization is induced by broadband XUV attosecond pulses. In the dominant DPI reaction which leads to the NO+(c3Π) ionic state, photoionization dynamics across the σ* shape resonance are probed by molecular frame photoelectron angular distributions where the parallel and perpendicular transitions are highlighted, as well as the circular dichroism CDAD(θe) in the molecular frame. The latter also constitute benchmark references for molecular polarimetry. The measured dynamical parameters are well described by multichannel Schwinger configuration interaction calculations. Similar results are obtained for the DPI spectroscopy of highly excited NO+ electronic states populated in the explored XUV photon energy range
Ordered Phases of Itinerant Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya Magnets and Their Electronic Properties
A field theory appropriate for magnets that display helical order due to the
Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya mechanism, a class that includes MnSi and FeGe, is used to
derive the phase diagram in a mean-field approximation. The helical phase, the
conical phase in an external magnetic field, and recent proposals for the
structure of the A-phase and the non-Fermi-liquid region in the paramagnetic
phase are discussed. It is shown that the orientation of the helical pitch
vector along an external magnetic field within the conical phase occurs via two
distinct phase transitions. The Goldstone modes that result from the long-range
order in the various phases are determined, and their consequences for
electronic properties, in particular the specific heat, the single-particle
relaxation time, and the electrical and thermal conductivities, are derived.
Various aspects of the ferromagnetic limit, and qualitative differences between
the transport properties of helimagnets and ferromagnets, are also discussed.Comment: 22pp, 8 eps fig
Neospora caninum infection and repeated abortions in humans.
To determine whether Neospora caninum, a parasite known to cause repeated abortions and stillbirths in cattle, also causes repeated abortions in humans, we retrospectively examined serum samples of 76 women with a history of abortions for evidence of N. caninum infection. No antibodies to the parasite were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunofluorescence assay, or Western blot
Chiral Skyrmionic matter in non-centrosymmetric magnets
Axisymmetric magnetic strings with a fixed sense of rotation and nanometer
sizes (chiral magnetic vortices or Skyrmions) have been predicted to exist in a
large group of non-centrosymmetric crystals more than two decades ago. Recently
these extraordinary magnetic states have been directly observed in thin layers
of cubic helimagnet (Fe,Co)Si. In this report we apply our earlier theoretical
findings to review main properties of chiral Skyrmions, to elucidate their
physical nature, and to analyse these recent experimental results on
magnetic-field-driven evolution of Skyrmions and helicoids in chiral
helimagnets.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, invited talk - JEMS-2010 ( 23-28 August, Krakow,
Poland
Slow Coarsening in an Ising Chain with Competing Interactions
We investigate the zero-temperature coarsening dynamics of a chain of Ising
spins with a nearest-neighbor ferromagnetic and an nth-neighbor
antiferromagnetic interactions. For sufficiently large antiferromagnetic
interaction, the ground state consists of consecutive up spins followed by
n down spins, etc. We show that the asymptotic coarsening into this ground
state is governed by a multispecies reactive gas of elementary excitations. The
basic elementary excitations are identified and each decays at a different
power-law rate in time. The dominant excitations are domains of n+1 spins which
diffuse freely and disappear through processes which are effectively governed
by (n+1)-particle annihilation. This implies that the ground state is
approached slowly with time, as t^{-1/n}.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, revtex 2-column format, submitted to J. Phys.
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