122,196 research outputs found
Magnetism and superconductivity in strongly correlated CeRhIn5
Specific heat studies of CeRhIn5 as functions of pressure and magnetic field
have been used to explore the relationship between magnetism and unconventional
superconductivity, both of which involve the 4f electron of Ce. Results of
these studies cannot be understood as a simple competition for Fermi-surface
states and require a new conceptual framework.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Crossover from the parity-conserving pair contact process with diffusion to other universality classes
The pair contact process with diffusion (PCPD) with modulo 2 conservation
(\pcpdt) [, ] is studied in one dimension, focused on the
crossover to other well established universality classes: the directed Ising
(DI) and the directed percolation (DP). First, we show that the \pcpdt shares
the critical behaviors with the PCPD, both with and without directional bias.
Second, the crossover from the \pcpdt to the DI is studied by including a
parity-conserving single-particle process (). We find the crossover
exponent , which is argued to be identical to that of the
PCPD-to-DP crossover by adding . This suggests that the PCPD
universality class has a well defined fixed point distinct from the DP. Third,
we study the crossover from a hybrid-type reaction-diffusion process belonging
to the DP [, ] to the DI by adding . We find
for the DP-to-DI crossover. The inequality of and
further supports the non-DP nature of the PCPD scaling. Finally, we
introduce a symmetry-breaking field in the dual spin language to study the
crossover from the \pcpdt to the DP. We find , which is
associated with a new independent route from the PCPD to the DP.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Remark on the effective potential of the gravitational perturbation in the black hole background projected on the brane
The polar perturbation is examined when the spacetime is expressed by a 4d
metric induced from higher-dimensional Schwarzschild geometry. Since the
spacetime background is not a vacuum solution of 4d Einstein equation, the
various general principles are used to understand the behavior of the
energy-momentum tensor under the perturbation. It is found that although the
general principles fix many components, they cannot fix two components of the
energy-momentum tensor. Choosing two components suitably, we derive the
effective potential which has a correct 4d limit.Comment: 12 pages, no figure, CQG accepte
The strongest experimental constraints on SU(5)xU(1) supergravity models
We consider a class of well motivated string-inspired flipped
supergravity models which include four supersymmetry breaking scenarios:
no-scale, strict no-scale, dilaton, and special dilaton, such that only three
parameters are needed to describe all new phenomena . We show that the LEP precise measurements of the electroweak parameters
in the form of the variable, and the CLEOII allowed range for
\bsg are at present the most important experimental constraints on this class
of models. For m_t\gsim155\,(165)\GeV, the constraint (at
90(95)\%CL) requires the presence of light charginos
(m_{\chi^\pm_1}\lsim50-100\GeV depending on ). Since all sparticle
masses are proportional to , m_{\chi^\pm_1}\lsim100\GeV
implies: m_{\chi^0_1}\lsim55\GeV, m_{\chi^0_2}\lsim100\GeV, m_{\tilde
g}\lsim360\GeV, m_{\tilde q}\lsim350\,(365)\GeV, m_{\tilde
e_R}\lsim80\,(125)\GeV, m_{\tilde e_L}\lsim120\,(155)\GeV, and
m_{\tilde\nu}\lsim100\,(140)\GeV in the no-scale (dilaton) flipped
supergravity model. The \bsg constraint excludes a significant fraction of
the otherwise allowed region in the plane
(irrespective of the magnitude of the chargino mass), while future experimental
improvements will result in decisive tests of these models. In light of the
constraint, we conclude that the outlook for chargino and
selectron detection at LEPII and at HERA is quite favorable in this class of
models.Comment: CTP-TAMU-40/93, Latex, 13 pages, 10 figures (available as uuencoded
0.963MB file from [email protected]
A New Halo Finding Method for N-Body Simulations
We have developed a new halo finding method, Physically Self-Bound (PSB)
group finding algorithm, which can efficiently identify halos located even at
crowded regions. This method combines two physical criteria such as the tidal
radius of a halo and the total energy of each particle to find member
particles. Two hierarchical meshes are used to increase the speed and the power
of halo identification in the parallel computing environments. First, a coarse
mesh with cell size equal to the mean particle separation is
used to obtain the density field over the whole simulation box. Mesh cells
having density contrast higher than a local cutoff threshold
are extracted and linked together for those adjacent to each other. This
produces local-cell groups. Second, a finer mesh is used to obtain density
field within each local-cell group and to identify halos. If a density shell
contains only one density peak, its particles are assigned to the density peak.
But in the case of a density shell surrounding at least two density peaks, we
use both the tidal radii of halo candidates enclosed by the shell and the total
energy criterion to find physically bound particles with respect to each halo.
Similar to DENMAX and HOP, the \hfind method can efficiently identify small
halos embedded in a large halo, while the FoF and the SO do not resolve such
small halos. We apply our new halo finding method to a 1-Giga particle
simulation of the CDM model and compare the resulting mass function
with those of previous studies. The abundance of physically self-bound halos is
larger at the low mass scale and smaller at the high mass scale than proposed
by the Jenkins et al. (2001) who used the FoF and SO methods. (abridged)Comment: 10 pages, 8 figs, submitted to Ap
Presure-Induced Superconducting State of Antiferromagnetic CaFeAs
The antiferromagnet CaFeAs does not become superconducting when
subject to ideal hydrostatic pressure conditions, where crystallographic and
magnetic states also are well defined. By measuring electrical resistivity and
magnetic susceptibility under quasi-hydrostatic pressure, however, we find that
a substantial volume fraction of the sample is superconducting in a narrow
pressure range where collapsed tetragonal and orthorhombic structures coexist.
At higher pressures, the collapsed tetragonal structure is stabilized, with the
boundary between this structure and the phase of coexisting structures strongly
dependent on pressure history. Fluctuations in magnetic degrees of freedom in
the phase of coexisting structures appear to be important for
superconductivity.Comment: revised (6 pages, 5 figures) - includes additional experimental
result
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