174 research outputs found

    Strain Coupled Domains in BaTiO3(111)-CoFeB Heterostructures

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    Domain pattern transfer from ferroelectric to ferromagnetic materials is a critical step for the electric field control of magnetism and has the potential to provide new schemes for low-power data storage and computing devices. Here we investigate domain coupling in BaTiO3_3(111)/CoFeB heterostructures by direct imaging in a wide-field Kerr microscope. The magnetic easy axis is found to locally change direction as a result of the underlying ferroelectric domains and their polarisation. By plotting the remanent magnetisation as a function of angle in the plane of the CoFeB layer, we find that the magnetic easy axes in adjacent domains are angled at 60∘^\circ or 120∘^\circ, corresponding to the angle of rotation of the polarisation from one ferroelectric domain to the next, and that the magnetic domain walls may be charged or uncharged depending on the magnetic field history. Micromagnetic simulations show that the properties of the domain walls vary depending on the magnetoelastic easy axis configuration and the charged or uncharged nature of the wall. The configuration where the easy axis alternates by 60∘^\circ and a charged wall is initialised exhibits the largest change in domain wall width from 192 nm to 119 nm as a function of in-plane magnetic field. Domain wall width tuning provides an additional degree of freedom for devices that seek to manipulate magnetic domain walls using strain coupling to ferroelectrics.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure

    Variation in Stemmatal Morphology of Larvae of Liodessus noviaffinis Miller (Dytiscidae: Hydroporinae: Bidessini)

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    Second and third instars tentatively identified as Liodessus noviaffinis Miller have six dorsolateral stemmata near the origin of each antenna. However, each stemma lacks a corneal (cuticular) lens on the surface exterior to its internal sensory pigmented components

    Gauge transformations in the Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalisms of generally covariant theories

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    We study spacetime diffeomorphisms in Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formalisms of generally covariant systems. We show that the gauge group for such a system is characterized by having generators which are projectable under the Legendre map. The gauge group is found to be much larger than the original group of spacetime diffeomorphisms, since its generators must depend on the lapse function and shift vector of the spacetime metric in a given coordinate patch. Our results are generalizations of earlier results by Salisbury and Sundermeyer. They arise in a natural way from using the requirement of equivalence between Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulations of the system, and they are new in that the symmetries are realized on the full set of phase space variables. The generators are displayed explicitly and are applied to the relativistic string and to general relativity.Comment: 12 pages, no figures; REVTeX; uses multicol,fancyheadings,eqsecnum; to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Evolutionary Laws, Initial Conditions, and Gauge Fixing in Constrained Systems

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    We describe in detail how to eliminate nonphysical degrees of freedom in the Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulations of a constrained system. Two important and distinct steps in our method are the fixing of ambiguities in the dynamics and the determination of inequivalent initial data. The Lagrangian discussion is novel, and a proof is given that the final number of degrees of freedom in the two formulations agrees. We give applications to reparameterization invariant theories, where we prove that one of the constraints must be explicitly time dependent. We illustrate our procedure with the examples of trajectories in spacetime and with spatially homogeneous cosmological models. Finally, we comment briefly on Dirac's extended Hamiltonian technique.Comment: 23 pages; plain TeX. To appear: Classical & Quantum Gravit

    Exploring what lies behind public preferences for avoiding health losses caused by lapses in healthcare safety and patient lifestyle choices

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    © 2013 Singh et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0),which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.Background: Although many studies have identified public preferences for prioritising health care interventions based on characteristics of recipient or care, very few of them have examined the reasons for the stated preferences. We conducted an on-line person trade-off (PTO) study (N=1030) to investigate whether the public attach a premium to the avoidance of ill health associated with alternative types of responsibilities: lapses in healthcare safety, those caused by individual action or lifestyle choice; or genetic conditions. We found that the public gave higher priority to prevention of harm in a hospital setting such as preventing hospital associated infections than genetic disorder but drug administration errors were valued similar to genetic disorders. Prevention of staff injuries, lifestyle diseases and sports injuries, were given lower priority. In this paper we aim to understand the reasoning behind the responses by analysing comments provided by respondents to the PTO questions. Method: A majority of the respondents who participated in the survey provided brief comments explaining preferences in free text responses following PTO questions. This qualitative data was transformed into explicit codes conveying similar meanings. An overall coding framework was developed and a reliability test was carried out. Recurrent patterns were identified in each preference group. Comments which challenged the assumptions of hypothetical scenarios were also investigated. Results: NHS causation of illness and a duty of care were the most cited reasons to prioritise lapses in healthcare safety. Personal responsibility dominated responses for lifestyle related contexts, and many respondents mentioned that health loss was the result of the individual’s choice to engage in risky behaviour. A small proportion of responses questioned the assumptions underlying the PTO questions. However excluding these from the main analysis did not affect the conclusions. Conclusion: Although some responses indicated misunderstanding or rejection of assumptions we put forward, the results were still robust. The reasons put forward for responses differed between comparisons but responsibility was the most frequently cited. Most preference elicitation studies only focus on eliciting numerical valuations but allowing for qualitative data can augment understanding of preferences as well as verifying results.EPSRC through the MATCH programme(EP/F063822/1 and EP/G012393/1) and HERG within Brunel University

    High resolution magnetic microscopy based on semi-encapsulated graphene Hall sensors

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    The realization of quantitative, noninvasive sensors for ambient magnetic imaging with high spatial and magnetic field resolution remains a major challenge. To address this, we have developed a relatively simple process to fabricate semi-encapsulated graphene/hBN Hall sensors assembled by dry transfer onto pre-patterned gold contacts. 1 lm-sized Hall cross sensors at a drive current of 0.5 lA exhibit excellent room temperature sensitivity, SI 700 V/AT, and good minimum detectable fields, Bmin ¼ 0.54 G/Hz0.5 at a measurement frequency of 1 kHz, with considerable scope for further optimization of these parameters. We illustrate their application in an imaging study of labyrinth magnetic domains in a ferrimagnetic yttrium iron garnet film
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