808 research outputs found
Admixtures to d-wave gap symmetry in untwinned YBa2Cu3O7 superconducting films measured by angle-resolved electron tunneling
We report on an \textit{ab}-anisotropy of and in
ramp-edge junctions between untwinned YBaCuO and % -wave
Nb. For these junctions, the angle with the YBaCuO
crystal b-axis is varied as a single parameter. The
A()-dependence presents 2-fold symmetry. The minima in
at suggest a real s-wave subdominant
component and negligible -wave or imaginary s-wave admixtures. The
()-dependence is well-fitted by 83% -, 15%
isotropic - and 2% anisotropic s-wave order parameter symmetry, consistent
with .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter
Critical evaluation of assessor difference correction approaches in sensory analysis
In sensory data analysis, assessor-dependent scaling effects may hinder the analysis of product differences. Romano et al. (2008) compared several approaches to reduce scaling differences between assessors by their ability to maximise the product effect F-values in a mixed ANOVA analysis. Their study on a sensory dataset of 14 cheese samples assessed by twelve assessors on a continuous scale showed that some of these approaches apparently improved the F-value of the product effect. However, this direct comparison is only legitimate if these F-values originate from the same null distribution. To obtain the null distributions of the different correction methods, we employed a permutation approach on the same cheese dataset also used by Romano et al. (2008) and a random noise simulation approach. Based on the empirically obtained null distributions, we calculated the corrected product effect significance to directly compare the performance of the preprocessing methods. Our results show that the null distributions of some preprocessing methods do not correspond to the expected F-distribution. In particular for the ten Berge method, the null distribution is shifted towards higher F-values. Therefore, an observed increase of the product effect F-value, as compared to the F-value on raw data, does not necessarily lead to increased product effect significance. If p-values are calculated based on such inflated F-values, significance may thus be overestimated. In contrast, calculation of p-values directly from the empirical null distributions obtained by permutation provides a common ground to properly compare method performance. Moreover, we show that differences in reproducibility between assessors, as they exist in real-world sensory datasets, may lead to overestimation of product effect significance by the mixed assessor model (MAM).publishedVersio
Anti-ferromagnetic ordering in arrays of superconducting pi-rings
We report experiments in which one dimensional (1D) and two dimensional (2D)
arrays of YBa2Cu3O7-x-Nb pi-rings are cooled through the superconducting
transition temperature of the Nb in various magnetic fields. These pi-rings
have degenerate ground states with either clockwise or counter-clockwise
spontaneous circulating supercurrents. The final flux state of each ring in the
arrays was determined using scanning SQUID microscopy. In the 1D arrays,
fabricated as a single junction with facets alternating between alignment
parallel to a [100] axis of the YBCO and rotated 90 degrees to that axis,
half-fluxon Josephson vortices order strongly into an arrangement with
alternating signs of their magnetic flux. We demonstrate that this ordering is
driven by phase coupling and model the cooling process with a numerical
solution of the Sine-Gordon equation. The 2D ring arrays couple to each other
through the magnetic flux generated by the spontaneous supercurrents. Using
pi-rings for the 2D flux coupling experiments eliminates one source of disorder
seen in similar experiments using conventional superconducting rings, since
pi-rings have doubly degenerate ground states in the absence of an applied
field. Although anti-ferromagnetic ordering occurs, with larger negative bond
orders than previously reported for arrays of conventional rings, long-range
order is never observed, even in geometries without geometric frustration. This
may be due to dynamical effects. Monte-Carlo simulations of the 2D array
cooling process are presented and compared with experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figure
Superconducting thin films of MgB2 on (001)-Si by pulsed laser deposition
Superconducting thin films have been prepared on Si-substrates, using pulsed
laser deposition from a target composed of a mixture of Mg and MgB2 powders.
The films were deposited at room temperature and post-annealed at 600 degrees
C. The zero resistance transition temperatures were 12 K, with an onset
transition temperature of 27 K. Special care has been taken to avoid oxidation
of Mg in the laser plasma and deposited film, by optimizing the background
pressure of Ar gas in the deposition chamber. For this the optical emission in
the visible range from the plasma has been used as indicator. Preventing Mg
from oxidation was found to be essential to obtain superconducting films
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