23,181 research outputs found
Insights into the orbital magnetism of noncollinear magnetic systems
The orbital magnetic moment is usually associated with the relativistic
spin-orbit interaction, but recently it has been shown that noncollinear
magnetic structures can also be its driving force. This is important not only
for magnetic skyrmions, but also for other noncollinear structures, either
bulk-like or at the nanoscale, with consequences regarding their experimental
detection. In this work we present a minimal model that contains the effects of
both the relativistic spin-orbit interaction and of magnetic noncollinearity on
the orbital magnetism. A hierarchy of models is discussed in a step-by-step
fashion, highlighting the role of time-reversal symmetry breaking for
translational and spin and orbital angular motions. Couplings of spin-orbit and
orbit-orbit type are identified as arising from the magnetic noncollinearity.
We recover the atomic contribution to the orbital magnetic moment, and a
nonlocal one due to the presence of circulating bound currents, exploring
different balances between the kinetic energy, the spin exchange interaction,
and the relativistic spin-orbit interaction. The connection to the scalar spin
chirality is examined. The orbital magnetism driven by magnetic noncollinearity
is mostly unexplored, and the presented model contributes to laying its
groundwork
Modelling spin waves in noncollinear antiferromagnets: spin-flop states, spin spirals, skyrmions and antiskyrmions
Spin waves in antiferromagnetic materials have great potential for
next-generation magnonic technologies. However, their properties and their
dependence on the type of ground-state antiferromagnetic structure are still
open questions. Here, we investigate theoretically spin waves in one- and
two-dimensional model systems with a focus on noncollinear antiferromagnetic
textures such as spin spirals and skyrmions of opposite topological charges. We
address in particular the nonreciprocal spin excitations recently measured in
bulk antiferromagnet -- utilizing
inelastic neutron scattering experiments [Phys.\ Rev.\ Lett.\ \textbf{119},
047201 (2017)], where we help to characterize the nature of the detected
spin-wave modes. Furthermore, we discuss how the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interaction can lift the degeneracy of the spin-wave modes in antiferromagnets,
resembling the electronic Rashba splitting. We consider the spin-wave
excitations in antiferromagnetic spin-spiral and skyrmion systems and discuss
the features of their inelastic scattering spectra. We demonstrate that
antiskyrmions can be obtained with an isotropic Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interaction in certain antiferromagnets.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
First-principles investigation of spin wave dispersions in surface-reconstructed Co thin films on W(110)
We computed spin wave dispersions of surface-reconstructed Co films on the
W(110) surface in the adiabatic approximation. The magnetic exchange
interactions are obtained via first-principles electronic structure
calculations using the Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker Green function method. We analyze
the strength and oscillatory behavior of the intralayer and interlayer magnetic
interactions and investigate the resulting spin wave dispersions as a function
of the thickness of Co films. In particular, we highlight and explain the
strong impact of hybridization of the electronic states at the Co-W interface
on the magnetic exchange interactions and on the spin wave dispersions. We
compare our results to recent measurements based on electron energy loss
spectroscopy [E. Michel, H. Ibach, and C.M. Schneider, Phys. Rev. B 92, 024407
(2015)]. Good overall agreement with experimental findings can be obtained by
considering the possible overestimation of the spin splitting, stemming from
the local spin density approximation, and adopting an appropriate correction.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Big Data as a Technology-to-think-with for Scientific Literacy
This research aimed to identify indications of scientific literacy resulting
from a didactic and investigative interaction with Google Trends Big Data
software by first-year students from a high-school in Novo Hamburgo, Southern
Brazil. Both teaching strategies and research interpretations lie on four
theoretical backgrounds. Firstly, Bunge's epistemology, which provides a
thorough characterization of Science that was central to our study. Secondly,
the conceptual framework of scientific literacy of Fives et al. that makes our
teaching focus precise and concise, as well as supports one of our
methodological tool: the SLA (scientific literacy assessment). Thirdly, the
"crowdledge" construct from dos Santos, which gives meaning to our study when
as it makes the development of scientific literacy itself versatile for paying
attention on sociotechnological and epistemological contemporary phenomena.
Finally, the learning principles from Papert's Constructionism inspired our
educational activities. Our educational actions consisted of students, divided
into two classes, investigating phenomena chose by them. A triangulation
process to integrate quantitative and qualitative methods on the assessments
results was done. The experimental design consisted in post-tests only and the
experimental variable was the way of access to the world. The experimental
group interacted with the world using analyses of temporal and regional plots
of interest of terms or topics searched on Google. The control class did
'placebo' interactions with the world through on-site observations of
bryophytes, fungus or whatever in the schoolyard. As general results of our
research, a constructionist environment based on Big Data analysis showed
itself as a richer strategy to develop scientific literacy, compared to a free
schoolyard exploration.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures, 8 table
Boundary Conditions for Kerr-AdS Perturbations
The Teukolsky master equation and its associated spin-weighted spheroidal
harmonic decomposition simplify considerably the study of linear gravitational
perturbations of the Kerr(-AdS) black hole. However, the formulation of the
problem is not complete before we assign the physically relevant boundary
conditions. We find a set of two Robin boundary conditions (BCs) that must be
imposed on the Teukolsky master variables to get perturbations that are
asymptotically global AdS, i.e. that asymptotes to the Einstein Static
Universe. In the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence, these BCs allow a
non-zero expectation value for the CFT stress-energy tensor while keeping fixed
the boundary metric. When the rotation vanishes, we also find the gauge
invariant differential map between the Teukolsky and the Kodama-Ishisbashi
(Regge-Wheeler-Zerilli) formalisms. One of our Robin BCs maps to the scalar
sector and the other to the vector sector of the Kodama-Ishisbashi
decomposition. The Robin BCs on the Teukolsky variables will allow for a
quantitative study of instability timescales and quasinormal mode spectrum of
the Kerr-AdS black hole. As a warm-up for this programme, we use the Teukolsky
formalism to recover the quasinormal mode spectrum of global AdS-Schwarzschild,
complementing previous analysis in the literature.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figure
AdS nonlinear instability: moving beyond spherical symmetry
Anti-de Sitter (AdS) is conjectured to be nonlinear unstable to a weakly
turbulent mechanism that develops a cascade towards high frequencies, leading
to black hole formation [1,2]. We give evidence that the gravitational sector
of perturbations behaves differently from the scalar one studied in [2]. In
contrast with [2], we find that not all gravitational normal modes of AdS can
be nonlinearly extended into periodic horizonless smooth solutions of the
Einstein equation. In particular, we show that even seeds with a single normal
mode can develop secular resonances, unlike the spherically symmetric scalar
field collapse studied in [2]. Moreover, if the seed has two normal modes, more
than one resonance can be generated at third order, unlike the spherical
collapse of [2]. We also show that weak turbulent perturbative theory predicts
the existence of direct and inverse cascades, with the former dominating the
latter for equal energy two-mode seeds.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, 2 table
Nonlocal orbital magnetism of 3d adatoms deposited on the Pt(111) surface
The orbital magnetic moment is still surprisingly not well understood, in
contrast to the spin part. Its description in finite systems, such as isolated
atoms and molecules, is not problematic, but it was only recently that a
rigorous picture was provided for extended systems. Here we focus on an
intermediate class of systems: magnetic adatoms placed on a non-magnetic
surface. We show that the essential quantity is the ground-state charge current
density, in the presence of spin-orbit coupling, and set out its
first-principles description. This is illustrated by studying the magnetism of
the surface Pt electrons, induced by the presence of Cr, Mn, Fe, Co and Ni
adatoms. A physically appealing partition of the charge current is introduced.
This reveals that there is an important nonlocal contribution to the orbital
moments of the Pt atoms, extending three times as far from each magnetic adatom
as the induced spin and local orbital moments. We find that it is as sizable as
the latter, and attribute its origin to a spin-orbital susceptibility of the Pt
surface, different from the one responsible for the formation of the local
orbital moments.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitte
The chiral biquadratic pair interaction
Magnetic interactions underpin a plethora of magnetic states of matter, hence
playing a central role both in fundamental physics and for future spintronic
and quantum computation devices. The Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, being
chiral and driven by relativistic effects, leads to the stabilization of
highly-noncollinear spin textures such as skyrmions, which thanks to their
topological nature are promising building blocks for magnetic data storage and
processing elements. Here, we reveal and study a new chiral pair interaction,
which is the biquadratic equivalent of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction.
First, we derive this interaction and its guiding principles from a microscopic
model. Second, we study its properties in the simplest prototypical systems,
magnetic dimers deposited on various substrates, resorting to systematic
first-principles calculations. Lastly, we discuss its importance and
implications not only for magnetic dimers but also for extended systems, namely
one-dimensional spin spirals and complex two-dimensional magnetic structures,
such as a nanoskyrmion lattice
Localised Black Holes
We numerically construct asymptotically global black holes that are localised on the . These are
solutions to type IIB supergravity with horizon topology that
dominate the theory in the microcanonical ensemble at small energies. At higher
energies, there is a first-order phase transition to
-Schwarzschild. By the AdS/CFT
correspondence, this transition is dual to spontaneously breaking the
R-symmetry of super Yang-Mills down to . We extrapolate
the location of this phase transition and compute the expectation value of the
resulting scalar operators in the low energy phase.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
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