321 research outputs found
Cu-NMR study on the disordered quantum spin magnet with the Bose-glass ground state
Cu-NMR study has been performed on the disordered spin-gap system
Tl1-xKxCuCl3 In the high-field H > HC=\Delta/\mu_B, where \Delta is the
spin-gap, the hyperfine field becomes extremely inhomogeneous at low
temperatures due to the field-induced magnetic order, indicating that the
ordered spin state must be different from the pure TlCuCl3. In the low field H
< HC, a saturating behavior in the longitudinal nuclear spin relaxation rate
1/T1 was observed at low temperatures, indicating existence of the magnetic
ground state proposed to be Bose-glass phase by Fisher.Comment: RHMF200
Multichannel parametrization of \pi N scattering amplitudes and extraction of resonance parameters
We present results of a new multichannel partial-wave analysis for \pi N
scattering in the c.m. energy range 1080 to 2100 MeV. This work explicitly
includes \eta N and K \Lambda channels and the single pion photoproduction
channel. Resonance parameters were extracted by fitting partial-wave amplitudes
from all considered channels using a multichannel parametrization that is
consistent with S-matrix unitarity. The resonance parameters so obtained are
compared to predictions of quark models
Cu- and Cl-NMR Studies of Triplet Localization in the Quantum Spin System NHCuCl
Cu- and Cl-NMR experiments were performed to investigate
triplet localization in the dimer compound NHCuCl, which shows
magnetization plateaus at one-quarter and three-quarters of the saturation
magnetization. In Cu-NMR experiments, signal from only the singlet Cu
site was observed, because that from the triplet Cu site was invisible due to
the strong spin fluctuation of onsite 3-spins. We found that the temperature
dependence of the shift of Cu-NMR spectra at the singlet Cu site
deviated from that of macroscopic magnetization below T=6 K. This deviation is
interpreted as the triplet localization in this system. From the
Cl-NMR experiments at the 1/4-plateau phase, we found the two
different temperature dependences of Cl-shift, namely the temperature
dependence of one deviates below T=6 K from that of the macroscopic
magnetization as observed in the Cu-NMR experiments, whereas the
other corresponds well with that of the macroscopic magnetization in the entire
experimental temperature region. We interpreted these dependences as reflecting
the transferred hyperfine field at the Cl site located at a singlet site and at
a triplet site, respectively. This result also indicates that the triplets are
localized at low temperatures. Cu-NMR experiments performed at high
magnetic fields between the one-quarter and three-quarters magnetization
plateaus have revealed that the two differently oriented dimers in the unit
cell are equally occupied by triplets, the fact of which limits the theoretical
model on the periodic structure of the localized triplets.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PRB (in press
Dimensionality and Irreversibility Field in YBa_2Cu_3O_7 Films (High Field Superconductors)
In order to investigate the relationship between the flux pinning and dimensionality, the critical current density J_c for YBa_2Cu_3O_7 films was measured as a function of temperature, field and tilt angle between field and c-axis. The kink anomaly in the temperature dependence of J_c for B⊥c was observed as the dimensional crossover from 3D extrinsic pinning to 2D intrinsic pinning. The irreversibility field B_i for B//c was measured in fields up to 23T and estimated to be 90T at 30K using the scaling law of the pinning force densities. The enhancement of B_i from a power law (1-T/T_c)^n with n≈1.5 for B//c was observed below 40K. This suggests the formation of the 2-dimensional pancake vortex in YBa_2Cu_3O_7
Experimental Apparatus for Critical Current Measurement above 5 K Using Bi-based oxide current leads
Case Study of a 20 T- φ400 mm Room Temperature Bore Superconducting Outsert for a 45 T Hybrid Magnet
Performance of adaptive DD-OFDM multicore fiber links and its relation with intercore crosstalk
Adaptive direct-detection (DD) orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is proposed to guarantee signal quality over time in weakly-coupled homogenous multicore fiber (MCFs) links impaired by stochastic intercore crosstalk (ICXT). For the first time, the received electrical power of the ICXT and the performance of the adaptive DD-OFDM MCF link are experimentally monitored quasi-simultaneously over a 210 hour period. Experimental results show that the time evolution of the error vector magnitude due to the ICXT can be suitably estimated from the normalized power of the detected crosstalk. The detected crosstalk results from the beating between the carrier in the test core and ICXT originating from the carrier and modulated signal from interfering core. The results show that the operation of DD-OFDM systems employing fixed modulation can be severely impaired by the presence of ICXT that may unpredictable vary in both power and frequency. The system may suffer from deleterious impact of moderate ICXT levels over a time duration of several hours or from peak ICXT levels occurring over a number of minutes. Such power fluctuations can lead to large variations in bit error ratio (BER) for static modulation schemes. Here, we show that BER fluctuations may be minimized by the use of adaptive modulation techniques and that in particular, the adaptive OFDM is a viable solution to guarantee link quality in MCF-based systems. An experimental model of an adaptive DD-OFDM MCF link shows an average throughput of 12 Gb/s that represents a reduction of only 9% compared to the maximum throughput measured without ICXT and an improvement of 23% relative to throughput obtained with static modulation.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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