27,600 research outputs found
Superconductivity in the Kondo lattice model
We study the Kondo lattice model with additional attractive interaction
between the conduction electrons within the dynamical mean-field theory using
the numerical renormalization group to solve the effective quantum impurity
problem. In addition to normal-state and magnetic phases we also allow for the
occurrence of a superconducting phase. In the normal phase we observe a very
sensitive dependence of the low-energy scale on the conduction-electron
interaction. We discuss the dependence of the superconducting transition on the
interplay between attractive interaction and Kondo exchange.Comment: Submitted to ICM 2009 Conference Proceeding
Spin heat accumulation and its relaxation in spin valves
We study the concept of spin heat accumulation in excited spin valves, more
precisely the effective electron temperature that may become spin dependent,
both in linear response and far from equilibrium. A temperature or voltage
gradient create non-equilibrium energy distributions of the two spin ensembles
in the normal metal spacer, which approach Fermi-Dirac functions through energy
relaxation mediated by electron-electron and electron-phonon coupling. Both
mechanisms also exchange energy between the spin subsystems. This inter-spin
energy exchange may strongly affect thermoelectric properties spin valves,
leading, e.g., to violations of the Wiedemann-Franz law.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, close to published versio
Wind Tunnel Generation of Sinusoidal Lateral and Longitudinal Gusts by Circulation of Twin Parallel Airfoils
A gust generator capable of producing sinusoidal lateral and longitudinal gusts was developed for the purpose of studying the gust response of a model rotor-propeller in a wind tunnel. The gust generator utilized harmonic circulation control of twin parallel airfoils to achieve the harmonic lift variation required for gust generation. The gust generator design, construction, and testing is described. Typical test results are presented in the form of lateral and longitudinal gust perturbation velocities as a function of generator reduced frequency
Dynamic charge inhomogenity in cuprate superconductors
The inelastic x-ray scattering spectrum for phonons of -symmetry
including the CuO bond-stretching phonon dispersion is analyzed by a Lorentz
fit in HgBaCuO and BiSrCuO, respectively, using
recently calculated phonon frequencies as input parameters. The resulting mode
frequencies of the fit are almost all in good agreement with the calculated
data. An exception is the second highest -branch compromising the
bond-stretching modes which disagrees in both compounds with the calculations.
This branch unlike the calculations shows an anomalous softening with a minimum
around the wavevector \vc{q}=\frac{2\pi}{a}(0.25, 0, 0). Such a disparity
with the calculated results, that are based on the assumption of an undisturbed
translation- and point group invariant electronic structure of the CuO plane,
indicates some {\it static} charge inhomogenities in the measured probes. Most
likely these will be charge stripes along the CuO bonds which have the
strongest coupling to certain longitudinal bond-stretching modes that in turn
selfconsistently induce corresponding {\it dynamic} charge inhomogenities. The
symmetry breaking by the mix of dynamic and static charge inhomogenities can
lead to a reconstruction of the Fermi surface into small pockets.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Stress engineering at the nanometer scale: Two-component adlayer stripes
Spontaneously formed equilibrium nanopatterns with long-range order are
widely observed in a variety of systems, but their pronounced temperature
dependence remains an impediment to maintain such patterns away from the
temperature of formation. Here, we report on a highly ordered stress-induced
stripe pattern in a two-component, Pd-O, adsorbate monolayer on W(110),
produced at high temperature and identically preserved at lower temperatures.
The pattern shows a tunable period (down to 16 nm) and orientation, as
predicted by a continuum model theory along with the surface stress and its
anisotropy found in our DFT calculations. The control over thermal fluctuations
in the stripe formation process is based on the breaking/restoring of
ergodicity in a high-density lattice gas with long-range interactions upon
turning off/on particle exchange with a heat bath.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
A Mott-like State of Molecules
We prepare a quantum state where each site of an optical lattice is occupied
by exactly one molecule. This is the same quantum state as in a Mott insulator
of molecules in the limit of negligible tunneling. Unlike previous Mott
insulators, our system consists of molecules which can collide inelastically.
In the absence of the optical lattice these collisions would lead to fast loss
of the molecules from the sample. To prepare the state, we start from a Mott
insulator of atomic 87Rb with a central region, where each lattice site is
occupied by exactly two atoms. We then associate molecules using a Feshbach
resonance. Remaining atoms can be removed using blast light. Our method does
not rely on the molecule-molecule interaction properties and is therefore
applicable to many systems.Comment: Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Atomic Physics
(ICAP 2006), edited by C. Roos, H. Haffner, and R. Blatt, AIP Conference
Proceedings, Melville, 2006, Vol. 869, pp. 278-28
Temperature dependence of surface stress across an order-disorder transition: p(1x2)O/W(110)
Strain relaxations of a p(1x2) ordered oxygen layer on W(110) are measured as
a function of temperature across the disordering transition using low-energy
electron diffraction. The measured strains approach values of 0.027 in the
[1-10] and -0.053 in the [001] direction. On the basis of the measured strain
relaxations, we give quantitative information on temperature-dependent surface
stress using the results of ab initio calculations. From the surface formation
energy for different strains, determined by first-principles calculations, we
estimate that surface stress changes from -1.1 for the ordered phase to -0.2N/m
for the disordered one along [1-10], and from 5.1 to 3.4 N/m along [001].
Moreover, our observation that the strains scale inversely with domain size
confirms that the strain relaxation takes place at the domain boundaries.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Statistical Mechanical Calculation of Anisotropic Step Stiffness of a Two-Dimensional Hexagonal Lattice Gas Model with Next-Nearest-Neighbor Interactions: Application to Si(111) Surface
We study a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice gas model with both nearest- and
next-nearest-neighbor interactions in a staggered field, which describes the
surface of stoichiometrically binary crystal.
We calculate anisotropic step tension, step stiffness, and equilibrium island
shape, by an extended random walk method. We apply the results to Si(111)
77 reconstructed surface and high-temperature Si(111) 11
surface. We also calculate inter-step interaction coefficient.Comment: revised on May 29 1999: RevTeX v3.1, 10 pages with 9 figures (one
figure added
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