97 research outputs found

    Fully Gapped Single-Particle Excitations in the Lightly Doped Cuprates

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    The low-energy excitations of the lightly doped cuprates were studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. A finite gap was measured over the entire Brillouin zone, including along the d_{x^2 - y^2} nodal line. This effect was observed to be generic to the normal states of numerous cuprates, including hole-doped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} and Ca_{2-x}Na_{x}CuO_{2}Cl_{2} and electron-doped Nd_{2-x}Ce_{x}CuO_{4}. In all compounds, the gap appears to close with increasing carrier doping. We consider various scenarios to explain our results, including the possible effects of chemical disorder, electronic inhomogeneity, and a competing phase.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.

    Velocity and angular distributions of evaporation residues from induced32 reactions

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    Velocity distributions of mass-resolved evaporation residues from reactions of S32 with C12, Mg24, Al27, Si28, and Ca40 have been measured at bombarding energies of 194, 239, and 278 MeV using time-of-flight techniques. In all cases, the observed shifts in the velocity centroids relative to the values expected for complete fusion are consistent with a previously reported parametrization of a threshold for onset of incomplete fusion. Angular distributions were measured and total cross sections extracted for the Mg32 system at all three energies. A comparison with existing results for Mg32 at lower energies, and with other systems leading to the Ni56 compound nucleus, suggests two different types of compound-nuclear limitations to complete fusion at higher energies
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