15,870 research outputs found
Non-universal pairing symmetry and pseudogap phenomena in hole- and electron-doped cuprate superconductors
Experimental studies of the pairing state of cuprate superconductors reveal asymmetric behaviors of the hole-doped (p-type) and electron-doped (n-type) cuprates. The pairing symmetry, pseudogap phenomenon, low-energy spin excitations and the spatial homogeneity of the superconducting order parameter appear to be non-universal among the cuprates, which may be attributed to competing orders. We propose that the non-universal pseudogap and nano-scale variations in the quasiparticle spectra may be the result of a charge nematic (CN) phase stabilized by disorder in highly two-dimensional (2D) p-type cuprates. The CN phase is accompanied by gapped spin excitations and competes with superconductivity (SC). In contrast, gapless spin excitations may be responsible for the absence of pseudogap and the presence of excess sub-gap spectral weight in the momentum-independent quasiparticle spectra of n-type cuprates. The physical implications and further verifications for these conjectures are discussed
Collective modes and quasiparticle interference on the local density of states of cuprate superconductors
The energy, momentum, and temperature dependence of the quasiparticle local density of states (LDOS) of a two-dimensional d(x2)-(y2)-wave superconductor with random disorder is investigated using the first-order T-matrix approximation. The results suggest that collective modes such as spin-charge-density waves are relevant low-energy excitations of the cuprates that contribute to the observed LDOS modulations in recent scanning tunneling microscopy studies of Bi2Sr2CaCu2Ox
Kinetic Study of Electrically Activated Reacting Systems at Relatively Low Temperature Levels Annual Status Report, Sep. 1965 - Sep. 1966
Kinetics of electrically activated reacting systems at low temperature
Noise removal in multichannel images
A adaptive filtering method, the Windrow-Hoff algorithm, for enhancing multichannel signals against aditive noise was investigated. It removes noise for multichannel images containing correlated signal compoments but uncorrelated noise components. Its potential application is the enhancement of multichannel microwave satellite images as a preprocessing step for the extraction of geophysical parameters
Improved silicon nitride for advanced heat engines
The results of a four year program to improve the strength and reliability of injection-molded silicon nitride are summarized. Statistically designed processing experiments were performed to identify and optimize critical processing parameters and compositions. Process improvements were monitored by strength testing at room and elevated temperatures, and microstructural characterization by optical, scanning electron microscopes, and scanning transmission electron microscope. Processing modifications resulted in a 20 percent strength and 72 percent Weibull slope improvement of the baseline material. Additional sintering aids screening and optimization experiments succeeded in developing a new composition (GN-10) capable of 581.2 MPa at 1399 C. A SiC whisker toughened composite using this material as a matrix achieved a room temperature toughness of 6.9 MPa m(exp .5) by the Chevron notched bar technique. Exploratory experiments were conducted on injection molding of turbocharger rotors
Response of Ionospheric Electron Density to a Change of Electron Temperature
Spatial and temporal models used to study response of ionospheric electron density to change of electron temperatur
Effect of milling and leaching on the structure of sintered silicon
Sintering was performed in He for 16 hours at 1200, 1250, and 1300 C. Compacts of as-received Si did not densify during sintering. Milling reduced the average particle size to below 0.5 micrometer and enhanced densification (1.75 g/cc). Leaching milled Si further enhanced densification (1.90 g/cc max.) and decreased structural coarsening. After sintering, the structure of the milled and leached powder compacts appears favorable for the production of reaction bonded silicon nitride
Vortex pinning by cylindrical defects in type-II superconductors: Numerical solutions to the Ginzburg-Landau equations
We numerically integrate the one-dimensional, cylindrically symmetric Ginzburg-Landau equations to calculate the spatial variation of the order parameter and supercurrents for a vortex trapped by a cylindrical defect. We use the resulting field distributions to estimate the pinning energy, and make use of the vortex/two-dimensional boson analogy to calculate the depinning temperature. The microscopic behavior oi the fields depends on the size, and the conductivity of the cylindrical defect appears to be important for the pinning
Investigating the Physical Origin of Unconventional Low-Energy Excitations and Pseudogap Phenomena in Cuprate Superconductors
We investigate the physical origin of unconventional low-energy excitations
in cuprate superconductors by considering the effect of coexisting competing
orders (CO) and superconductivity (SC) and of quantum fluctuations and other
bosonic modes on the low-energy charge excitation spectra. By incorporating
both SC and CO in the bare Green's function and quantum phase fluctuations in
the self-energy, we can consistently account for various empirical findings in
both the hole- and electron-type cuprates, including the excess subgap
quasiparticle density of states, ``dichotomy'' in the fluctuation-renormalized
quasiparticle spectral density in momentum space, and the occurrence and
magnitude of a low-energy pseudogap being dependent on the relative gap
strength of CO and SC. Comparing these calculated results with experiments of
ours and others, we suggest that there are two energy scales associated with
the pseudogap phenomena, with the high-energy pseudogap probably of magnetic
origin and the low-energy pseudogap associated with competing orders.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Invited paper for the 2006 Taiwan International
Conference on Superconductivity. Correspondence author: Nai-Chang Yeh
(e-mail: [email protected]
The relative importance of head, flux, and prior information in hydraulic tomography analysis
Using cross-correlation analysis, we demonstrate that flux measurements at observation locations during hydraulic tomography (HT) surveys carry nonredundant information about heterogeneity that are complementary to head measurements at the same locations. We then hypothesize that a joint interpretation of head and flux data, even when the same observation network as head has been used, can enhance the resolution of HT estimates. Subsequently, we use numerical experiments to test this hypothesis and investigate the impact of flux conditioning and prior information (such as correlation lengths and initial mean models (i.e., uniform mean or distributed means)) on the HT estimates of a nonstationary, layered medium. We find that the addition of flux conditioning to HT analysis improves the estimates in all of the prior models tested. While prior information on geologic structures could be useful, its influence on the estimates reduces as more nonredundant data (i.e., flux) are used in the HT analysis. Lastly, recommendations for conducting HT surveys and analysis are presented
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