146 research outputs found
(93)Nb NMR spin echo spectroscopy in single crystal NbSe(3)
International audienceWe report electric field induced phase displacements of the charge density wave (CDW) in a single crystal of NbSe(3) using (93)Nb NMR spin-echo spectroscopy. CDW polarizations in the pinned state induced by unipolar and bipolar pulses are linear and reversible up to at least E = (0.96)E(T). The polarizations have a broad distribution extending up to phase angles of order 60 degrees for electric fields close to threshold. No evidence for polarizations in excess of a CDW wavelength or for a divergence in polarization near ET are observed. The results are consistent with elastic depinning models, provided that the critical regime expected in large systems is not observable
Vortex Pinball Under Crossed AC Drives in Superconductors with Periodic Pinning Arrays
Vortices driven with both a transverse and a longitudinal AC drive which are
out of phase are shown to exhibit a novel commensuration-incommensuration
effect when interacting with periodic substrates. For different AC driving
parameters, the motion of the vortices forms commensurate orbits with the
periodicity of the pinning array. When the commensurate orbits are present,
there is a finite DC critical depinning threshold, while for the incommensurate
phases the vortices are delocalized and the DC depinning threshold is absent.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figure
Optical investigation of the charge-density-wave phase transitions in
We have measured the optical reflectivity of the quasi
one-dimensional conductor from the far infrared up to the
ultraviolet between 10 and 300 using light polarized along and normal to
the chain axis. We find a depletion of the optical conductivity with decreasing
temperature for both polarizations in the mid to far-infrared region. This
leads to a redistribution of spectral weight from low to high energies due to
partial gapping of the Fermi surface below the charge-density-wave transitions
at 145 K and 59 K. We deduce the bulk magnitudes of the CDW gaps and discuss
the scattering of ungapped free charge carriers and the role of fluctuations
effects
Incommensuration Effects and Dynamics in Vortex Chains
We examine the motion of one-dimensional (1D) vortex matter embedded in a 2D
vortex system with weak pinning using numerical simulations. We confirm the
conjecture of Matsuda et al. [Science 294, 2136 (2001)] that the onset of the
temperature induced motion of the chain is due to an incommensuration effect of
the chain with the periodic potential created by the bulk vortices. In
addition, under an applied driving force we find a two stage depinning
transition, where the initial depinning of the vortex chain occurs through
soliton like pulses. When an ac drive is added to the dc drive, we observe
phase locking of the moving vortex chain.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figure
Mode-Locking in Driven Disordered Systems as a Boundary-Value Problem
We study mode-locking in disordered media as a boundary-value problem.
Focusing on the simplest class of mode-locking models which consists of a
single driven overdamped degree-of-freedom, we develop an analytical method to
obtain the shape of the Arnol'd tongues in the regime of low ac-driving
amplitude or high ac-driving frequency. The method is exact for a scalloped
pinning potential and easily adapted to other pinning potentials. It is
complementary to the analysis based on the well-known Shapiro's argument that
holds in the perturbative regime of large driving amplitudes or low driving
frequency, where the effect of pinning is weak.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, RevTeX, Submitte
Post-Newtonian Gravitational Radiation
1 Introduction 2 Multipole Decomposition 3 Source Multipole Moments 4
Post-Minkowskian Approximation 5 Radiative Multipole Moments 6 Post-Newtonian
Approximation 7 Point-Particles 8 ConclusionComment: 46 pages, in Einstein's Field Equations and Their Physical
Implications, B. Schmidt (Ed.), Lecture Notes in Physics, Springe
X-Ray Scattering Measurements of the Transient Structure of a Driven Charge-Density-Wave
We report time-resolved x-ray scattering measurements of the transient
structural response of the sliding {\bf Q} charge-density-wave (CDW) in
NbSe to a reversal of the driving electric field. The observed time scale
characterizing this response at 70K varies from 15 msec for driving
fields near threshold to 2 msec for fields well above threshold. The
position and time-dependent strain of the CDW is analyzed in terms of a
phenomenological equation of motion for the phase of the CDW order parameter.
The value of the damping constant, eV
seconds \AA, is in excellent agreement with the value
determined from transport measurements. As the driving field approaches
threshold from above, the line shape becomes bimodal, suggesting that the CDW
does not depin throughout the entire sample at one well-defined voltage.Comment: revtex 3.0, 7 figure
Influence of thermal fluctuations on quantum phase transitions in one-dimensional disordered systems: Charge density waves and Luttinger liquids
The low temperature phase diagram of 1D weakly disordered quantum systems
like charge or spin density waves and Luttinger liquids is studied by a
\emph{full finite temperature} renormalization group (RG) calculation. For
vanishing quantum fluctuations this approach is amended by an \emph{exact}
solution in the case of strong disorder and by a mapping onto the \emph{Burgers
equation with noise} in the case of weak disorder, respectively. At \emph{zero}
temperature we reproduce the quantum phase transition between a pinned
(localized) and an unpinned (delocalized) phase for weak and strong quantum
fluctuations, respectively, as found previously by Fukuyama or Giamarchi and
Schulz.
At \emph{finite} temperatures the localization transition is suppressed: the
random potential is wiped out by thermal fluctuations on length scales larger
than the thermal de Broglie wave length of the phason excitations. The
existence of a zero temperature transition is reflected in a rich cross-over
phase diagram of the correlation functions. In particular we find four
different scaling regions: a \emph{classical disordered}, a \emph{quantum
disordered}, a \emph{quantum critical} and a \emph{thermal} region. The results
can be transferred directly to the discussion of the influence of disorder in
superfluids. Finally we extend the RG calculation to the treatment of a
commensurate lattice potential. Applications to related systems are discussed
as well.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Dynamic ordering and frustration of confined vortex rows studied by mode-locking experiments
The flow properties of confined vortex matter driven through disordered
mesoscopic channels are investigated by mode locking (ML) experiments. The
observed ML effects allow to trace the evolution of both the structure and the
number of confined rows and their match to the channel width as function of
magnetic field. From a detailed analysis of the ML behavior for the case of
3-rows we obtain ({\it i}) the pinning frequency , ({\it ii}) the onset
frequency for ML ( ordering velocity) and ({\it iii}) the
fraction of coherently moving 3-row regions in the channel. The
field dependence of these quantities shows that, at matching, where is
maximum, the pinning strength is small and the ordering velocity is low, while
at mismatch, where is small, both the pinning force and the ordering
velocity are enhanced. Further, we find that , consistent
with the dynamic ordering theory of Koshelev and Vinokur. The microscopic
nature of the flow and the ordering phenomena will also be discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure, submitted to PRB. Discussion has been improved
and a figure has been adde
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