3,565 research outputs found
Specific heat of single crystal MgB_2: a two-band superconductor with two different anisotropies
Heat-capacity measurements of a 39 microgramm MgB_2 single crystal in fields
up to 14 T and below 3 K allow the determination of the low-temperature linear
term of the specific heat, its field dependence and its anisotropy. Our results
are compatible with two-band superconductivity, the band carrying the small gap
being isotropic, that carrying the large gap having an anisotropy of ~ 5. Three
different upper critical fields are thus needed to describe the superconducting
state of MgB2.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures - V2: Bibliography updated and some typo
corrected. One reference added - V3: version accepted for publication in PRL,
changes made in the tex
Dynamical stability for the gravitational evolution of a homogeneous polytrope
URL: http://www-spht.cea.fr/articles/s00/008 Stabilité dynamique de l'évolution gravitationnelle d'un polytrope homogèneThe dynamic stability of the spherical gravitational evolution (collapse or expansion) for a homogeneous polytropic gas with any exponent is studied using the lagrangian formalism. We obtain the analytical expression for density perturbations at the first order. In the case the Jeans'criterion is easily generalized to a self-similar expanding background. The collapsing case is found to be always unstable. The stability of density modes obtained for does not introduce any conditions on the wavelength perturbation, but only a criterion on the polytropic index. As a result, stability is obtained for an expanding gas provided $\gamma 5/3.
Metagenomic-based Surveillance of Pacific Coast tick Dermacentor occidentalis Identifies Two Novel Bunyaviruses and an Emerging Human Ricksettsial Pathogen.
An increasing number of emerging tick-borne diseases has been reported in the United States since the 1970s. Using metagenomic next generation sequencing, we detected nucleic acid sequences from 2 novel viruses in the family Bunyaviridae and an emerging human rickettsial pathogen, Rickettsia philipii, in a population of the Pacific Coast tick, Dermacentor occidentalis in Mendocino County sampled annually from 2011 to 2014. A total of 250 adults of this human-biting, generalist tick were collected from contiguous chaparral and grassland habitats, and RNA from each individually extracted tick was deep sequenced to an average depth of 7.3 million reads. We detected a Francisella endosymbiont in 174 ticks (70%), and Rickettsia spp. in 19 ticks (8%); Rickettsia-infected ticks contained R. rhipicephali (16 of 250, 6.4%) or R. philipii (3 of 250,1.2%), the agent of eschar-associated febrile illness in humans. The genomes of 2 novel bunyaviruses (>99% complete) in the genera Nairovirus and Phlebovirus were also identified and found to be present in 20-91% of ticks, depending on the year of collection. The high prevalence of these bunyaviruses in sampled Dermacentor ticks suggests that they may be viral endosymbionts, although further studies are needed to determine whether they are infectious for vertebrate hosts, especially humans, and their potential role in tick ecology
Similarity Properties and Scaling Laws of Radiation Hydrodynamic Flows in Laboratory Astrophysics
The spectacular recent development of modern high-energy density laboratory
facilities which concentrate more and more energy in millimetric volumes allows
the astrophysical community to reproduce and to explore, in millimeter-scale
targets and during very short times, astrophysical phenomena where radiation
and matter are strongly coupled. The astrophysical relevance of these
experiments can be checked from the similarity properties and especially
scaling laws establishment, which constitutes the keystone of laboratory
astrophysics. From the radiating optically thin regime to the so-called
optically thick radiative pressure regime, we present in this paper, for the
first time, a complete analysis of the main radiating regimes that we
encountered in laboratory astrophysics with the same formalism based on the
Lie-group theory. The use of the Lie group method appears as systematic which
allows to construct easily and orderly the scaling laws of a given problem.
This powerful tool permits to unify the recent major advances on scaling laws
and to identify new similarity concepts that we discuss in this paper and which
opens important applications for the present and the future laboratory
astrophysics experiments. All these results enable to demonstrate theoretically
that astrophysical phenomena in such radiating regimes can be explored
experimentally thanks to powerful facilities. Consequently the results
presented here are a fundamental tool for the high-energy density laboratory
astrophysics community in order to quantify the astrophysics relevance and
justify laser experiments. Moreover, relying on the Lie-group theory, this
paper constitutes the starting point of any analysis of the self-similar
dynamics of radiating fluids.Comment: Astrophys. J. accepte
Anisotropic properties of MgB2 by torque magnetometry
Anisotropic properties of superconducting MgB2 obtained by torque
magnetometry are compared to theoretical predictions, concentrating on two
issues. Firstly, the angular dependence of Hc2 is shown to deviate close to Tc
from the dependence assumed by anisotropic Ginzburg-Landau theory. Secondly,
from the evaluation of torque vs angle curves it is concluded that the
anisotropy of the penetration depth gamma_lambda has to be substantially higher
at low temperature than theoretical estimates, at least in fields higher than
0.2 T.Comment: 2 p.,2 Fig., submitted to Physica C (M2S-Rio proceedings); v2: 1 ref
adde
Effect of density of state on isotope effect exponent of two-band superconductors
The exact formula of Tc's equation and the isotope effect exponent of
two-band s-wave superconductors in weak-coupling limit are derived by
considering the influence of two kinds of density of state : constant and van
Hove singularity. The pairing interaction in each band consisted of 2 parts :
the electron-phonon interaction and non-electron-phonon interaction are
included in our model. We find that the interband interaction of
electron-phonon show more effect on isotope exponent than the intraband
interaction and the isotope effect exponent with constant density of state can
fit to an experimental data,MgB2, and high-Tc superconductors, better than van
Hove singularity density of state.Comment: 11 pages. accepted in Physica
Fermi surface topology and vortex state in MgB2
Based on a detailed modeling of the Fermi surface topology of MgB2 we
calculated the anisotropy of the upper critical field Bc2 within the two gap
model. The sigma-band is modeled as a distorted cylinder and the pi-band as a
half-torus, with parameters determined from bandstructure calculations. Our
results show that the unusual strong temperature dependence of the Bc2
anisotropy, that has been observed recently, can be understood due to the small
c-axis dispersion of the cylindrical Fermi surface sheets and the small
interband pairing interaction as obtained from bandstructure calculations. We
calculate the magnetic field dependence of the density of states within the
vortex state for field in c-axis direction and compare with recent measurements
of the specific heat on MgB2 single crystals.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figure
Specific heat of MgB_2 after irradiation
We studied the effect of disorder on the superconducting properties of
polycrystalline MgB_2 by specific-heat measurements. In the pristine state,
these measurements give a bulk confirmation of the presence of two
superconducting gaps with 2 Delta 0 / k_B T_c = 1.3 and 3.9 with nearly equal
weights. The scattering introduced by irradiation suppresses T_c and tends to
average the two gaps although less than predicted by theory. We also found that
by a suitable irradiation process by fast neutrons, a substantial bulk increase
of dH_{c2}/dT at T_c can be obtained without sacrificing more than a few
degrees in T_c. The upper critical field of the sample after irradiation
exceeds 28 T at T goes to 0 K.Comment: 11 pages text, 6 figures, accepted by Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matte
Magnetic properties of two-phase superconductors
We have recently proposed a theoretical model for superconductors endowed
with two distinct superconducting phases, described by two scalar order
parameters which condensate at different critical temperatures. On analyzing
the magnetic behavior of such systems, we have found some observable
differences with respect to the case of ordinary Ginzburg-Landau
superconductors. In particular, at low temperature the London penetration
length is strongly reduced and the Ginzburg-Landau parameter k becomes a
function of temperature. By contrast, in the temperature region between the two
phase transitions k is constant and the system is a type-I or a type-II
superconductor depending on the ratio between the critical temperatures.Comment: revtex, 5 pages, 1 eps figur
Non-stationary Rayleigh-Taylor instability in supernovae ejecta
The Rayleigh-Taylor instability plays an important role in the dynamics of
several astronomical objects, in particular, in supernovae (SN) evolution. In
this paper we develop an analytical approach to study the stability analysis of
spherical expansion of the SN ejecta by using a special transformation in the
co-moving coordinate frame. We first study a non-stationary spherical expansion
of a gas shell under the pressure of a central source. Then we analyze its
stability with respect to a no radial, non spherically symmetric perturbation
of the of the shell. We consider the case where the polytropic constant of the
SN shell is and we examine the evolution of a arbitrary shell
perturbation. The dispersion relation is derived. The growth rate of the
perturbation is found and its temporal and spatial evolution is discussed. The
stability domain depends on the ejecta shell thickness, its acceleration, and
the perturbation wavelength.Comment: 16 page
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