7,055 research outputs found
Spin flip scattering at Al surfaces
Non-local measurements are performed on a multi terminal device to
determine the spin diffusion length and in combination with resistivity
measurements also the spin relaxation time in Al films. By varying the
thickness of Al we determine the contribution to spin relaxation from surface
scattering. From the temperature dependence of the spin diffusion length it is
established that the spin relaxation is impurity dominated at low temperature.
A comparison of the spin and momentum relaxation lengths for different
thicknesses reveals that the spin flip scattering at the surfaces is weak
compared to that within the bulk of the Al films.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Rotation and Neoclassical Ripple Transport in ITER
Neoclassical transport in the presence of non-axisymmetric magnetic fields
causes a toroidal torque known as neoclassical toroidal viscosity (NTV). The
toroidal symmetry of ITER will be broken by the finite number of toroidal field
coils and by test blanket modules (TBMs). The addition of ferritic inserts
(FIs) will decrease the magnitude of the toroidal field ripple. 3D magnetic
equilibria with toroidal field ripple and ferromagnetic structures are
calculated for an ITER steady-state scenario using the Variational Moments
Equilibrium Code (VMEC). Neoclassical transport quantities in the presence of
these error fields are calculated using the Stellarator Fokker-Planck Iterative
Neoclassical Conservative Solver (SFINCS). These calculations fully account for
, flux surface shaping, multiple species, magnitude of ripple, and
collisionality rather than applying approximate analytic NTV formulae. As NTV
is a complicated nonlinear function of , we study its behavior over a
plausible range of . We estimate the toroidal flow, and hence , using
a semi-analytic turbulent intrinsic rotation model and NUBEAM calculations of
neutral beam torque. The NTV from the ripple dominates
that from lower perturbations of the TBMs. With the inclusion of FIs, the
magnitude of NTV torque is reduced by about 75% near the edge. We present
comparisons of several models of tangential magnetic drifts, finding
appreciable differences only for superbanana-plateau transport at small .
We find the scaling of calculated NTV torque with ripple magnitude to indicate
that ripple-trapping may be a significant mechanism for NTV in ITER. The
computed NTV torque without ferritic components is comparable in magnitude to
the NBI and intrinsic turbulent torques and will likely damp rotation, but the
NTV torque is significantly reduced by the planned ferritic inserts
Test of Einstein Equivalence Principle for 0-spin and half-integer-spin atoms: Search for spin-gravity coupling effects
We report on a conceptually new test of the equivalence principle performed
by measuring the acceleration in Earth's gravity field of two isotopes of
strontium atoms, namely, the bosonic Sr isotope which has no spin vs the
fermionic Sr isotope which has a half-integer spin. The effect of
gravity upon the two atomic species has been probed by means of a precision
differential measurement of the Bloch frequency for the two atomic matter waves
in a vertical optical lattice. We obtain the values for the E\"otv\"os parameter and
for the coupling between nuclear spin and gravity.
This is the first reported experimental test of the equivalence principle for
bosonic and fermionic particles and opens a new way to the search for the
predicted spin-gravity coupling effects.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. New spin-gravtity coupling analysis on the data
added to the manuscrip
Enhanced spin accumulation in a superconductor
A lateral array of ferromagnetic tunnel junctions is used to inject and
detect non-equilibrium quasi-particle spin distribution in a superconducting
strip made of Al. The strip width and thickness is kept below the quasi
particle spin diffusion length in Al. Non-local measurements in multiple
parallel and antiparallel magnetic states of the detectors are used to in-situ
determine the quasi-particle spin diffusion length. A very large increase in
the spin accumulation in the superconducting state compared to that in the
normal state is observed and is attributed to a diminishing of the
quasi-particle population by opening of the gap below the transition
temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Journal of Applied
Physic
A compact and efficient strontium oven for laser-cooling experiments
Here we describe a compact and efficient strontium oven well suited for
laser-cooling experiments. Novel design solutions allowed us to produce a
collimated strontium atomic beam with a flux of 1.0\times10^13 s^-1 cm^-2 at
the oven temperature of 450 {\deg}C, reached with an electrical power
consumption of 36 W. The oven is based on a stainless-steel reservoir, filled
with 6 g of metallic strontium, electrically heated in a vacuum environment by
a tantalum wire threaded through an alumina multi-bore tube. The oven can be
hosted in a standard DN40CF cube and has an estimated continuous operation
lifetime of 10 years. This oven can be used for other alkali and alkaline earth
metals with essentially no modifications.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Review of Scientific Instruments, in pres
Spin injection and relaxation in a mesoscopic superconductor
We study spin accumulation and spin relaxation in a superconducting nanowire.
Spins are injected and detected by using a set of magnetic tunnel contact
electrodes, closely spaced along the nanowire. We observe a giant enhancement
of the spin accumulation of up to five orders of magnitude on transition into
the superconducting state, consistent with the expected changes in the density
of states. The spin relaxation length decreases by an order of magnitude from
its value in the normal state. These measurements combined with our theoretical
model, allow us to distinguish the individual spin flip mechanisms present in
the transport channel. Our conclusion is that magnetic impurities rather than
spin-orbit coupling dominate spin-flip scattering in the superconducting state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
A high stability semiconductor laser system for a Sr-based optical lattice clock
We describe a frequency stabilized diode laser at 698 nm used for high
resolution spectroscopy of the 1S0-3P0 strontium clock transition. For the
laser stabilization we use state-of-the-art symmetrically suspended optical
cavities optimized for very low thermal noise at room temperature. Two-stage
frequency stabilization to high finesse optical cavities results in measured
laser frequency noise about a factor of three above the cavity thermal noise
between 2 Hz and 11 Hz. With this system, we demonstrate high resolution remote
spectroscopy on the 88Sr clock transition by transferring the laser output over
a phase-noise-compensated 200 m-long fiber link between two separated
laboratories. Our dedicated fiber link ensures a transfer of the optical
carrier with frequency stability of 7 \cdot 10^{-18} after 100 s integration
time, which could enable the observation of the strontium clock transition with
an atomic Q of 10^{14}. Furthermore, with an eye towards the development of
transportable optical clocks, we investigate how the complete laser system
(laser+optics+cavity) can be influenced by environmental disturbances in terms
of both short- and long-term frequency stability.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Appl. Phys.
Reduced Physics Model of the Tokamak Scrape-off-Layer for Pulse Design
The dynamic interplay between the core and the edge plasma has important
consequences in the confinement and heating of fusion plasma. The transport of
the Scrape-Off-Layer (SOL) plasma imposes boundary conditions on the core
plasma, and neutral transport through the SOL influences the core plasma
sourcing. In order to better study these effects in a self-consistent,
time-dependent fashion with reasonable turn-around time, a reduced model is
needed. In this paper we introduce the SOL Box Model, a reduced SOL model that
calculates the plasma temperature and density in the SOL given the core-to-edge
particle and power fluxes and recycling coefficients. The analytic nature of
the Box Model allows one to readily incorporate SOL physics in time-dependent
transport solvers for pulse design applications in the control room. Here we
demonstrate such a coupling with the core transport solver TRANSP and compare
the results with density and temperature measurements, obtained through Thomson
scattering and Langmuir probes, of an NSTX discharge. Implications for future
interpretive and predictive simulations are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
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