290 research outputs found
Strong suppression of superconductivity by divalent Ytterbium Kondo-holes in CeCoIn_5
To study the nature of partially substituted Yb-ions in a Ce-based Kondo
lattice, we fabricated high quality Ce_{1-x}Yb_xCoIn_5 epitaxial thin films
using molecular beam epitaxy. We find that the Yb-substitution leads to a
linear decrease of the unit cell volume, indicating that Yb-ions are divalent
forming Kondo-holes in Ce_{1-x}Yb_xCoIn_5, and leads to a strong suppression of
the superconductivity and Kondo coherence. These results, combined with the
measurements of Hall effect, indicate that Yb-ions act as nonmagnetic impurity
scatters in the coherent Kondo lattice without serious suppression of the
antiferromagnetic fluctuations. These are in stark contrast to previous studies
performed using bulk single crystals, which claim the importance of valence
fluctuations of Yb-ions. The present work also highlights the suitability of
epitaxial films in the study of the impurity effect on the Kondo lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Unusual thermal Hall effect in a Kitaev spin liquid candidate -RuCl
The Kitaev quantum spin liquid displays the fractionalization of quantum
spins into Majorana fermions. The emergent Majorana edge current is predicted
to manifest itself in the form of a finite thermal Hall effect, a feature
commonly discussed in topological superconductors. Here we report on thermal
Hall conductivity measurements in -RuCl, a candidate
Kitaev magnet with the two-dimensional honeycomb lattice. In a spin-liquid
(Kitaev paramagnetic) state below the temperature characterized by the Kitaev
interaction K, positive develops gradually upon
cooling, demonstrating the presence of highly unusual itinerant excitations.
Although the zero-temperature property is masked by the magnetic ordering at
K, the sign, magnitude, and -dependence of at
intermediate temperatures follows the predicted trend of the itinerant Majorana
excitations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Controllable Rashba spin-orbit interaction in artificially engineered superlattices involving the heavy-fermion superconductor CeCoIn5
By using a molecular beam epitaxy technique, we fabricate a new type of
superconducting superlattices with controlled atomic layer thicknesses of
alternating blocks between heavy fermion superconductor CeCoIn_5, which
exhibits a strong Pauli pair-breaking effect, and nonmagnetic metal YbCoIn_5.
The introduction of the thickness modulation of YbCoIn_5 block layers breaks
the inversion symmetry centered at the superconducting block of CeCoIn_5. This
configuration leads to dramatic changes in the temperature and angular
dependence of the upper critical field, which can be understood by considering
the effect of the Rashba spin-orbit interaction arising from the inversion
symmetry breaking and the associated weakening of the Pauli pair-breaking
effect. Since the degree of thickness modulation is a design feature of this
type of superlattices, the Rashba interaction and the nature of pair-breaking
are largely tunable in these modulated superlattices with strong spin-orbit
coupling.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Lower Critical Fields of Superconducting PrFeAsO Single Crystals
We have studied the lower critical fields H_{c1} of superconducting iron
oxipnictide PrFeAsO_{1-y} single crystals for H parallel and perpendicular to
the ab-planes. Measurements of the local magnetic induction at positions
straddling the sample edge by using a miniature Hall-sensor array clearly
resolve the first flux penetration from the Meissner state. The temperature
dependence of H_{c1} for H || c is well scaled by the in-plane penetration
depth without showing any unusual behavior, in contrast to previous reports.
The anisotropy of penetration lengths at low temperatures is estimated to be ~
2.5, which is much smaller than the anisotropy of the coherence lengths. This
is indicative of multiband superconductivity in this system, in which the
active band for superconductivity is more anisotropic. We also point out that
the local induction measured at a position near the center of the crystal,
which has been used in a number of reports for the determination of H_{c1},
might seriously overestimate the obtained H_{c1}-value.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Tuning of magnetic quantum criticality in artificial Kondo superlattice CeRhIn5/YbRhIn5
The effects of reduced dimensions and the interfaces on antiferromagnetic
quantum criticality are studied in epitaxial Kondo superlattices, with
alternating layers of heavy-fermion antiferromagnet CeRhIn and 7 layers
of normal metal YbRhIn. As is reduced, the Kondo coherence temperature
is suppressed due to the reduction of effective Kondo screening. The N\'{e}el
temperature is gradually suppressed as decreases and the quasiparticle mass
is strongly enhanced, implying dimensional control toward quantum criticality.
Magnetotransport measurements reveal that a quantum critical point is reached
for superlattice by applying small magnetic fields. Remarkably, the
anisotropy of the quantum critical field is opposite to the expectations from
the magnetic susceptibility in bulk CeRhIn, suggesting that the Rashba
spin-orbit interaction arising from the inversion symmetry breaking at the
interface plays a key role for tuning the quantum criticality in the
two-dimensional Kondo lattice.Comment: Main text: 5 pages, 4 figures; Supplemental material:6 pages, 3
figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Diphoton Production at Hadron Colliders and New Contact Interactions
We explore the capability of the Tevatron and LHC to place limits on the
possible existence of flavor-independent contact
interactions which can lead to an excess of diphoton events with large
invariant masses. Assuming no departure from the Standard Model is observed, we
show that the Tevatron will eventually be able to place a lower bound of
0.5-0.6 TeV on the scale associated with this new contact interaction. At the
LHC, scales as large as 3-6 TeV may be probed with suitable detector cuts and
an integrated luminosity of .Comment: LaTex, 12pages plus 5 figures(available on request), SLAC-PUB-657
A Measurement of the Cross Section in Two-Photon Processes
We have measured the inclusive production cross section in a
two-photon collision at the TRISTAN collider. The mean of
the collider was 57.16 GeV and the integrated luminosity was 150 . The
differential cross section () was obtained in the
range between 1.6 and 6.6 GeV and compared with theoretical predictions, such
as those involving direct and resolved photon processes.Comment: 8 pages, Latex format (article), figures corrected, published in
Phys. Rev. D 50 (1994) 187
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