431 research outputs found
Columnar defects and vortex fluctuations in layered superconductors
We investigate fluctuations of Josephson-coupled pancake vortices in layered
superconductors in the presence of columnar defects. We study the
thermodynamics of a single pancake stack pinned by columnar defects and obtain
the temperature dependence of localization length, pinning energy and critical
current. We study the creep regime and compute the crossover current between
line-like creep and pancake-like creep motion. We find that columnar defects
effectively increase interlayer Josephson coupling by suppressing thermal
fluctuations of pancakes. This leads to an upward shift in the decoupling line
most pronounced around the matching field.Comment: 5 pages, REVTeX, no figure
Superconducting Coherence and the Helicity Modulus in Vortex Line Models
We show how commonly used models for vortex lines in three dimensional
superconductors can be modified to include k=0 excitations. We construct a
formula for the k=0 helicity modulus in terms of fluctuations in the projected
area of vortex loops. This gives a convenient criterion for the presence of
superconducting coherence. We also present Monte Carlo simulations of a
continuum vortex line model for the melting of the Abrikosov vortex lattice in
pure YBCO.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 eps figures included using eps
Flux-line entanglement as the mechanism of melting transition in high-temperature superconductors in a magnetic field
The mechanism of the flux-line-lattice (FLL) melting in anisotropic high-T_c
superconductors in is clarified by Monte Carlo
simulations of the 3D frustrated XY model. The percentage of entangled flux
lines abruptly changes at the melting temperature T_m, while no sharp change
can be found in the number and size distribution of vortex loops around T_m.
Therefore, the origin of this melting transition is the entanglement of flux
lines. Scaling behaviors of physical quantities are consistent with the above
mechanism of the FLL melting. The Lindemann number is also evaluated without
any phenomenological arguments.Comment: 10 pages, 5 Postscript figures, RevTeX; changed content and figures,
Phys. Rev. B Rapid Commun. in pres
Effects of columnar disorder on flux-lattice melting in high-temperature superconductors
The effect of columnar pins on the flux-lines melting transition in
high-temperature superconductors is studied using Path Integral Monte Carlo
simulations. We highlight the similarities and differences in the effects of
columnar disorder on the melting transition in YBaCuO
(YBCO) and the highly anisotropic BiSrCaCuO (BSCCO) at
magnetic fields such that the mean separation between flux-lines is smaller
than the penetration length. For pure systems, a first order transition from a
flux-line solid to a liquid phase is seen as the temperature is increased. When
adding columnar defects to the system, the transition temperature is not
affected in both materials as long as the strength of an individual columnar
defect (expressed as a flux-line defect interaction) is less than a certain
threshold for a given density of randomly distributed columnar pins. This
threshold strength is lower for YBCO than for BSCCO. For higher strengths the
transition line is shifted for both materials towards higher temperatures, and
the sharp jump in energy, characteristic of a first order transition, gives way
to a smoother and gradual rise of the energy, characteristic of a second order
transition. Also, when columnar defects are present, the vortex solid phase is
replaced by a pinned Bose glass phase and this is manifested by a marked
decrease in translational order and orientational order as measured by the
appropriate structure factors. For BSCCO, we report an unusual rise of the
translational order and the hexatic order just before the melting transition.
No such rise is observed in YBCO.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, revte
Vortex-line liquid phases: Longitudinal superconductivity in the lattice London model
We study the vortex-line lattice and liquid phases of a clean type-II
superconductor by means of Monte Carlo simulations of the lattice London model.
Motivated by a recent controversy regarding the presence, within this model, of
a vortex-liquid regime with longitudinal superconducting coherence over long
length scales, we directly compare two different ways to calculate the
longitudinal coherence. For an isotropic superconductor, we interpret our
results in terms of a temperature regime within the liquid phase in which
longitudinal superconducting coherence extends over length scales larger than
the system thickness studied. We note that this regime disappears in the
moderately anisotropic case due to a proliferation, close to the flux-line
lattice melting temperature, of vortex loops between the layers.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex, with eps figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Universal properties for linelike melting of the vortex lattice
Using numerical results obtained within two models describing vortex matter
(interacting elastic lines (Bose model) and uniformly frustrated XY-model) we
establish universal properties of the melting transition within the linelike
regime. These properties, which are captured correctly by both models, include
the scaling of the melting temperature with anisotropy and magnetic field, the
effective line tension of vortices in the liquid regime, the latent heat, the
entropy jump per entanglement length, and relative jump of Josephson energy at
the transition as compared to the latent heat. The universal properties can
serve as experimental fingerprints of the linelike regime of melting.
Comparison of the models allows us to establish boundaries of the linelike
regime in temperature and magnetic field.Comment: Revtex, 12 pages, 2 EPS figure
Domain regime in two-dimensional disordered vortex matter
A detailed numerical study of the real space configuration of vortices in
disordered superconductors using 2D London-Langevin model is presented. The
magnetic field is varied between 0 and for various pinning
strengths . For weak pinning, an inhomogeneous disordered vortex matter
is observed, in which the topologically ordered vortex lattice survives in
large domains. The majority of the dislocations in this state are confined to
the grain boundaries/domain walls. Such quasi-ordered configurations are
observed in the intermediate fields, and we refer it as the domain regime (DR).
The DR is distinct from the low-field and the high-fields amorphous regimes
which are characterized by a homogeneous distribution of defects over the
entire system. Analysis of the real space configuration suggests domain wall
roughening as a possible mechanism for the crossover from the DR to the
high-field amorphous regime. The DR also shows a sharp crossover to the high
temperature vortex liquid phase. The domain size distribution and the roughness
exponent of the lattice in the DR are also calculated. The results are compared
with some of the recent Bitter decoration experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Muon-Spin Rotation Spectra in the Mixed Phase of High-T_c Superconductors : Thermal Fluctuations and Disorder Effects
We study muon-spin rotation (muSR) spectra in the mixed phase of highly
anisotropic layered superconductors, specifically Bi_2+xSr_2-xCaCu_2O_8+delta
(BSCCO), by modeling the fluid and solid phases of pancake vortices using
liquid-state and density functional methods. The role of thermal fluctuations
in causing motional narrowing of muSR lineshapes is quantified in terms of a
first-principles theory of the flux-lattice melting transition. The effects of
random point pinning are investigated using a replica treatment of liquid state
correlations and a replicated density functional theory. Our results indicate
that motional narrowing in the pure system, although substantial, cannot
account for the remarkably small linewidths obtained experimentally at
relatively high fields and low temperatures. We find that satisfactory
agreement with the muSR data for BSCCO in this regime can be obtained through
the ansatz that this ``phase'' is characterized by frozen short-range
positional correlations reflecting the structure of the liquid just above the
melting transition. This proposal is consistent with recent suggestions of a
``pinned liquid'' or ``glassy'' state of pancake vortices in the presence of
pinning disorder. Our results for the high-temperature liquid phase indicate
that measurable linewidths may be obtained in this phase as a consequence of
density inhomogeneities induced by the pinning disorder. The results presented
here comprise a unified, first-principles theoretical treatment of muSR spectra
in highly anisotropic layered superconductors in terms of a controlled set of
approximations.Comment: 50 pages Latex file, including 10 postscript figure
Dynamic Vortex Phases and Pinning in Superconductors with Twin Boundaries
We investigate the pinning and driven dynamics of vortices interacting with
twin boundaries using large scale molecular dynamics simulations on samples
with near one million pinning sites. For low applied driving forces, the vortex
lattice orients itself parallel to the twin boundary and we observe the
creation of a flux gradient and vortex free region near the edges of the twin
boundary. For increasing drive, we find evidence for several distinct dynamical
flow phases which we characterize by the density of defects in the vortex
lattice, the microscopic vortex flow patterns, and orientation of the vortex
lattice. We show that these different dynamical phases can be directly related
to microscopically measurable voltage - current V(I) curves and voltage noise.
By conducting a series of simulations for various twin boundary parameters we
derive several vortex dynamic phase diagrams.Comment: 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Search for black holes and other new phenomena in high-multiplicity final states in proton-proton collisions at root s=13 TeV
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