7,369 research outputs found

    Antisymmetric magnetoresistance in magnetic multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy

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    While magnetoresistance (MR) has generally been found to be symmetric in applied field in non-magnetic or magnetic metals, we have observed antisymmetric MR in Co/Pt multilayers. Simultaneous domain imaging and transport measurements show that the antisymmetric MR is due to the appearance of domain walls that run perpendicular to both the magnetization and the current, a geometry existing only in materials with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. As a result, the extraordinary Hall effect (EHE) gives rise to circulating currents in the vicinity of the domain walls that contributes to the MR. The antisymmetric MR and EHE have been quantitatively accounted for by a theoretical model.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure

    Auxiliary field formalism for dilute fermionic atom gases with tunable interactions

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    We develop the auxiliary field formalism corresponding to a dilute system of spin-1/2 fermions. This theory represents the Fermi counterpart of the BEC theory developed recently by F. Cooper et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 240402 (2010)] to describe a dilute gas of Bose particles. Assuming tunable interactions, this formalism is appropriate for the study of the crossover from the regime of Bardeen-Cooper-Schriffer (BCS) pairing to the regime of Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) in ultracold fermionic atom gases. We show that when applied to the Fermi case at zero temperature, the leading-order auxiliary field (LOAF) approximation gives the same equations as those obtained in the standard BCS variational picture. At finite temperature, LOAF leads to the theory discussed by by Sa de Melo, Randeria, and Engelbrecht [Phys. Rev. Lett. 71, 3202(1993); Phys. Rev. B 55, 15153(1997)]. As such, LOAF provides a unified framework to study the interacting Fermi gas. The mean-field results discussed here can be systematically improved upon by calculating the one-particle irreducible (1-PI) action corrections, order by order.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure

    A new degree six modified chordal ring network topology

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    The performance of a parallel or distributed network depends on the design of its interconnection topology. One good network interconnection topology that has been the focus of various researchers is the chordal ring. In this paper, a new degree six modified chordal ring is presented, the optimised degree six 3-modified chordal ring (CHR6o3), with the aim of comparing its performance parameters in terms of optimal diameter and optimal average path length to existing degree six chordal rings. Formulae to generate the data for each different chordal ring were derived from its corresponding tree visualisation or used from previous work. Network sizes tested were from 1200 to 12000 nodes. Large networks of CHR6o3 were shown to perform better than those of previous degree six chordal rings. This gives CHR6o3 an added advantage for its implementation in large distributive networks, such as Fibre to the Home (FTTH) networks, since it offers redundancies at higher network layers

    Combination Rules, Charge Symmetry, and Hall Effect in Cuprates

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    The rule relating the observed Hall coefficient to the spin and charge responses of the uniform doped Mott insulator is derived. It is essential to include the contribution of holon and spinon three-current correlations to the effective action of the gauge field. In the vicinity of the Mott insulating point the Hall coefficient is holon dominated and weakly temperature dependent. In the vicinity of a point of charge conjugation symmetry the holon contribution to the observed Hall coefficient is small: the Hall coefficient follows the temperature dependence of the diamagnetic susceptibility with a sign determined by the Fermi surface shape. NOTE: document prepared using REVTEX. (3 Figs, not included, available on request from: [email protected])Comment: 8 page

    Dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting fermionic atoms in a potential trap

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    We derive a set of dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting fermionic atoms in a potential trap across a Feshbach resonance. Our derivation is based on a variational ansatz, which generalizes the crossover wavefunction to the inhomogeneous case, and the assumption that the order parameter is slowly varying over the size of the Cooper pairs. The equations reduce to a generalized time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation on the BEC side of the resonance. We discuss an iterative method to solve these mean-field equations, and present the solution for a harmonic trap as an illustrating example to self-consistently verify the approximations made in our derivation.Comment: replaced with the published versio

    Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect in Hg1y_{1-y}Mny_{y}Te Quantum Wells

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    The quantum Hall effect is usually observed when the two-dimensional electron gas is subjected to an external magnetic field, so that their quantum states form Landau levels. In this work we predict that a new phenomenon, the quantum anomalous Hall effect, can be realized in Hg1y_{1-y}Mny_{y}Te quantum wells, without the external magnetic field and the associated Landau levels. This effect arises purely from the spin polarization of the MnMn atoms, and the quantized Hall conductance is predicted for a range of quantum well thickness and the concentration of the MnMn atoms. This effect enables dissipationless charge current in spintronics devices.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. For high resolution figures see final published version when availabl

    Multi-Lepton Collider Signatures of Heavy Dirac and Majorana Neutrinos

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    We discuss the possibility of observing multi-lepton signals at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) from the production and decay of heavy Standard Model (SM) singlet neutrinos added in extensions of SM to explain the observed light neutrino masses by seesaw mechanism. In particular, we analyze two `smoking gun' signals depending on the Dirac or Majorana nature of the heavy neutrino: (i) for Majorana case, the same-sign di-lepton signal which can be used as a probe of lepton-number violation, and (ii) for Dirac case, the tri-lepton signal which conserves lepton number but may violate lepton flavor. Within a minimal Left-Right symmetric framework in which these additional neutrino states arise naturally, we find that in both cases, the signals can be identified with virtually no background beyond a TeV, and the heavy gauge boson W_R can be discovered in this process. This analysis also provides a direct way to probe the nature of seesaw physics involving the SM singlets at TeV scale, and in particular, to distinguish type-I seesaw with purely Majorana heavy neutrinos from inverse seesaw with pseudo-Dirac counterparts.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures; typo in eq. 5 fixed; matches published versio

    Pelvic Angiography and the Diagnosis of Carcinoma of the Uterine Cervix

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    The hospital records and pelvic arteriograms of 31 patients with suspected, persistent or recurrent carcinoma of the uterine cervix were reviewed. The method used was found to be highly accurate in diagnosing and localizing tumors and was considered most helpful in suspected pelvic wall recurrences. Tumor encasement of the vessels can be mimicked by perivascular, postoperative and post radiation fibrosis. Tumor vessels and tumor stain are the better angiographic indicators of the presence of recurrent or persistent disease.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135472/1/ijgo00175.pd

    Scaling of the anomalous Hall effect in Sr1x_{1-x}Cax_xRuO3_3

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    The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) of ferromagnetic thin films of Sr1x_{1-x}Cax_{x}RuO3_3 (0 x\leq x \leq 0.4) is studied as a function of xx and temperature TT. As xx increases, both the transition temperature TcT_c and the magnetization MM are reduced and vanish near xx \sim 0.7. For all compositions, the transverse resistivity ρH\rho_{H} varies non-monotonously with TT, and even changes sign, thus violating the conventional expression ρH=RoB+4πRsM(T)\rho_{H}=R_o B + 4\pi R_s M(T) (BB is the magnetic induction, while RoR_o and RsR_s are the ordinary and anomalous Hall coefficients). From the rather complicated data of ρH\rho_H, we find a scaling behavior of the transverse conductivity σxy\sigma_{xy} with M(T)M(T), which is well reproduced by the first-principles band calculation assuming the intrinsic origin of the AHE.Comment: REVTeX 4 style; 5 pages, 3 figures; revised 23/2 and accepted for publicatio
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