19,955 research outputs found
A Next Generation High-speed Data Acquisition System for Multi-channel Infrared and Optical Photometry
We report the design, operation, and performance of a next generation
high-speed data acquisition system for multi-channel infrared and optical
photometry based on the modern technologies of Field Programmable Gate Arrays,
the Peripheral Component Interconnect bus, and the Global Positioning System.
This system allows either direct recording of photon arrival times or binned
photon counting with time resolution up to 1-s precision in Universal
Time, as well as real-time data monitoring and analysis. The system also allows
simultaneous recording of multi-channel observations with very flexible,
reconfigurable observational modes. We present successful 20-s resolution
simultaneous observations of the Crab Nebula Pulsar in the infrared (H-band)
and optical (V-band) wavebands obtained with this system and 100-s
resolution V-band observations of the dwarf nova IY Uma with the 5-m Hale
telescope at the Palomar Observatory.Comment: 11 pages, including 4 figures, to appear in PAS
Thermodynamic Phase Diagram of the Quantum Hall Skyrmion System
We numerically study the interacting quantum Hall skyrmion system based on
the Chern-Simons action. By noticing that the action is invariant under global
spin rotations in the spin space with respect to the magnetic field direction,
we obtain the low-energy effective action for a many skyrmion system.
Performing extensive molecular dynamics simulations, we establish the
thermodynamic phase diagram for a many skyrmion system.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 2 postscript figure
Quantum Hall Ferromagnets: Induced Topological term and electromagnetic interactions
The quantum Hall ground state in materials like GaAs is well known
to be ferromagnetic in nature. The exchange part of the Coulomb interaction
provides the necessary attractive force to align the electron spins
spontaneously. The gapless Goldstone modes are the angular deviations of the
magnetisation vector from its fixed ground state orientation. Furthermore, the
system is known to support electrically charged spin skyrmion configurations.
It has been claimed in the literature that these skyrmions are fermionic owing
to an induced topological Hopf term in the effective action governing the
Goldstone modes. However, objections have been raised against the method by
which this term has been obtained from the microscopics of the system. In this
article, we use the technique of the derivative expansion to derive, in an
unambiguous manner, the effective action of the angular degrees of freedom,
including the Hopf term. Furthermore, we have coupled perturbative
electromagnetic fields to the microscopic fermionic system in order to study
their effect on the spin excitations. We have obtained an elegant expression
for the electromagnetic coupling of the angular variables describing these spin
excitations.Comment: 23 pages, Plain TeX, no figure
Coexistence of bulk and surface states probed by Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in BiSe with high charge-carrier density
Topological insulators are ideally represented as having an insulating bulk
with topologically protected, spin-textured surface states. However, it is
increasingly becoming clear that these surface transport channels can be
accompanied by a finite conducting bulk, as well as additional topologically
trivial surface states. To investigate these parallel conduction transport
channels, we studied Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in BiSe thin films,
in high magnetic fields up to 30 T so as to access channels with a lower
mobility. We identify a clear Zeeman-split bulk contribution to the
oscillations from a comparison between the charge-carrier densities extracted
from the magnetoresistance and the oscillations. Furthermore, our analyses
indicate the presence of a two-dimensional state and signatures of additional
states the origin of which cannot be conclusively determined. Our findings
underpin the necessity of theoretical studies on the origin of and the
interplay between these parallel conduction channels for a careful analysis of
the material's performance.Comment: Manuscript including supplemental materia
Reentrant Melting of Soliton Lattice Phase in Bilayer Quantum Hall System
At large parallel magnetic field , the ground state of bilayer
quantum Hall system forms uniform soliton lattice phase. The soliton lattice
will melt due to the proliferation of unbound dislocations at certain finite
temperature leading to the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) melting. We calculate the
KT phase boundary by numerically solving the newly developed set of Bethe
ansatz equations, which fully take into account the thermal fluctuations of
soliton walls. We predict that within certain ranges of , the
soliton lattice will melt at . Interestingly enough, as temperature
decreases, it melts at certain temperature lower than exhibiting
the reentrant behaviour of the soliton liquid phase.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Josephson surface plasmons in spatially confined cuprate superconductors
In this work, we generalize the theory of localized surface plasmons to the
case of high-Tc cuprate superconductors, spatially confined in the form of
small spherical particles. At variance from ordinary metals, cuprate
superconductors are characterized by a low-energy bulk excitation known as the
Josephson plasma wave (JPW), arising from interlayer tunneling of the
condensate along the c-axis. The effect of the JPW is revealed in a
characteristic spectrum of surface excitations, which we call Josephson surface
plasmons. Our results, which apply to any material with a strongly anisotropic
electromagnetic response, are worked out in detail for the case of multilayered
superconductors supporting both low-frequency (acoustic) and transverse-optical
JPW. Spatial confinement of the Josephson plasma waves may represent a new
degree of freedom to engineer their frequencies and to explore the link between
interlayer tunnelling and high-Tc superconductivity
Strong Correlation to Weak Correlation Phase Transition in Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems
At small layer separations, the ground state of a nu=1 bilayer quantum Hall
system exhibits spontaneous interlayer phase coherence and has a
charged-excitation gap E_g. The evolution of this state with increasing layer
separation d has been a matter of controversy. In this letter we report on
small system exact diagonalization calculations which suggest that a single
phase transition, likely of first order, separates coherent incompressible (E_g
>0) states with strong interlayer correlations from incoherent compressible
states with weak interlayer correlations. We find a dependence of the phase
boundary on d and interlayer tunneling amplitude that is in very good agreement
with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures included, version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Epitaxial growth of (111)-oriented LaAlO/LaNiO ultra-thin superlattices
The epitaxial stabilization of a single layer or superlattice structures
composed of complex oxide materials on polar (111) surfaces is severely
burdened by reconstructions at the interface, that commonly arise to neutralize
the polarity. We report on the synthesis of high quality LaNiO/mLaAlO
pseudo cubic (111) superlattices on polar (111)-oriented LaAlO, the
proposed complex oxide candidate for a topological insulating behavior.
Comprehensive X-Ray diffraction measurements, RHEED, and element specific
resonant X-ray absorption spectroscopy affirm their high structural and
chemical quality. The study offers an opportunity to fabricate interesting
interface and topology controlled (111) oriented superlattices based on
ortho-nickelates
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