243 research outputs found
Bounce-free spherical hydrodynamic implosion
In a bounce-free spherical hydrodynamic implosion, the post-stagnation hot
core plasma does not expand against the imploding flow. Such an implosion
scheme has the advantage of improving the dwell time of the burning fuel,
resulting in a higher fusion burn-up fraction. The existence of bounce-free
spherical implosions is demonstrated by explicitly constructing a family of
self-similar solutions to the spherically symmetric ideal hydrodynamic
equations. When applied to a specific example of plasma liner driven
magneto-inertial fusion, the bounce-free solution is found to produce at least
a factor of four improvement in dwell time and fusion energy gain.Comment: accepted by Phys. Plasmas (Nov. 7, 2011); for Ref. 11, please see
ftp://ftp.lanl.gov/public/kagan/liner_evolution.gi
Local spin spirals in the Neel phase of La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4
Experimental observations of lightly doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4, x < 0.02,
revealed remarkable magnetic properties such as the incommensurate noncollinear
ordering (additional to the Neel ordering) and a tremendous doping dependence
of the uniform longitudinal susceptibility. We show that the spiral solution of
the t-t'-t''-J model obtained by taking into account the Coulomb trapping of
holes by Sr ions describes these puzzling data perfectly well. Our solution
firstly explains why the incommensurate structure is directed along the
orthorhombic b-axis, and secondly allows a numerical calculation of the
positions and shapes of the incommensurate neutron scattering peaks. Thirdly,
we calculate the doping dependence of the spin-wave gap, and lastly, we study
the longitudinal magnetic susceptibility and show that its doping dependence is
due to the noncollinearity of the spin spiral.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Tendency of spherically imploding plasma liners formed by merging plasma jets to evolve toward spherical symmetry
Three dimensional hydrodynamic simulations have been performed using smoothed
particle hydrodynamics (SPH) in order to study the effects of discrete jets on
the processes of plasma liner formation, implosion on vacuum, and expansion.
The pressure history of the inner portion of the liner was qualitatively and
quantitatively similar from peak compression through the complete stagnation of
the liner among simulation results from two one dimensional
radiationhydrodynamic codes, 3D SPH with a uniform liner, and 3D SPH with 30
discrete plasma jets. Two dimensional slices of the pressure show that the
discrete jet SPH case evolves towards a profile that is almost
indistinguishable from the SPH case with a uniform liner, showing that
non-uniformities due to discrete jets are smeared out by late stages of the
implosion. Liner formation and implosion on vacuum was also shown to be robust
to Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth. Interparticle mixing for a liner
imploding on vacuum was investigated. The mixing rate was very small until
after peak compression for the 30 jet simulation.Comment: 28 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasmas (2012
Unusual magnetic susceptibility anisotropy in untwinned La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 single crystals in the lightly-doped region
We present a study of the magnetic susceptibility in carefully detwinned
La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_4 single crystals in the lightly-doped region (x=0-0.03),
which demonstrates a remarkable in-plane anisotropy of the spin system. This
anisotropy is found to persist after the long-range antiferromagnetic (AF)
order is destroyed by hole doping, suggesting that doped holes break the AF
order into domains in which the spin alignment is kept essentially intact. It
turns out that the freezing of the spins taking place at low temperatures is
also notably anisotropic, implying that the "spin-glass" feature is governed by
the domain structure as well.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.Let
Resonant inelastic x-ray scattering study of charge excitations in La2CuO4
We report a resonant inelastic x-ray scattering study of the dispersion
relations of charge transfer excitations in insulating LaCuO. These
data reveal two peaks, both of which show two-dimensional characteristics. The
lowest energy excitation has a gap energy of eV at the zone center,
and a dispersion of eV. The spectral weight of this mode becomes
dramatically smaller around (, ). The second peak shows a smaller
dispersion ( eV) with a zone-center energy of eV. We argue
that these are both highly dispersive exciton modes damped by the presence of
the electron-hole continuum.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
One-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamic scaling studies of imploding spherical plasma liners
One-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamic simulations are performed to develop
insight into the scaling of stagnation pressure with initial conditions of an
imploding spherical plasma shell or "liner." Simulations reveal the evolution
of high-Mach-number (M), annular, spherical plasma flows during convergence,
stagnation, shock formation, and disassembly, and indicate that cm- and
{\mu}s-scale plasmas with peak pressures near 1 Mbar can be generated by liners
with initial kinetic energy of several hundred kilo-joules. It is shown that
radiation transport and thermal conduction must be included to avoid
non-physical plasma temperatures at the origin which artificially limit liner
convergence and thus the peak stagnation pressure. Scalings of the stagnated
plasma lifetime ({\tau}stag) and average stagnation pressure (Pstag, the
pressure at the origin, averaged over {\tau}stag) are determined by evaluating
a wide range of liner initial conditions. For high-M flows, {\tau}stag L0/v0,
where L0 and v0 are the initial liner thickness and velocity, respectively.
Furthermore, for argon liners, Pstag scales approximately as v0^(15/4) over a
wide range of initial densities (n0), and as n0^(1/2) over a wide range of v0.
The approximate scaling Pstag ~ M 3/2 is also found for a wide range of
liner-plasma initial conditions.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, accepted by Physics of Plasmas (June 23, 2011
Metal-insulator Crossover Behavior at the Surface of NiS_2
We have performed a detailed high-resolution electron spectroscopic
investigation of NiS and related Se-substituted compounds
NiSSe, which are known to be gapped insulators in the bulk at all
temperatures. A large spectral weight at the Fermi energy of the room
temperature spectrum, in conjunction with the extreme surface sensitivity of
the experimental probe, however, suggests that the surface layer is metallic at
300 K. Interestingly, the evolution of the spectral function with decreasing
temperature is characterized by a continuous depletion of the single-particle
spectral weight at the Fermi energy and the development of a gap-like structure
below a characteristic temperature, providing evidence for a metal-insulator
crossover behavior at the surfaces of NiS and of related compounds. These
results provide a consistent description of the unusual transport properties
observed in these systems.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Suppression of Antiferromagnetic Order by Light Hole Doping in La_2Cu_{1-x}Li_xO_4: A ^{139}La NQR Study
^{139}La nuclear quadrupole resonance measurements in lightly doped
La_2Cu_{1-x}Li_xO_4 have been performed to reveal the dependence of the
magnetic properties of the antiferromagnetic CuO_2 planes on the character of
the doped holes and their interactions with the dopant. A detailed study shows
that the magnetic properties are remarkably insensitive to the character of the
dopant impurity. This indicates that the added holes form previously
unrecognized collective structures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Slightly modified version, as accepted for
publication in Physical Review Letter
Neutron Scattering Study of Spin Density Wave Order in the Superconducting State of Excess-Oxygen-Doped La2CuO4+y
We report neutron scattering measurements of spin density wave order within
the superconducting state of a single crystal of predominately stage-4
La2CuO4+y with a Tc(onset) of 42 K. The low temperature elastic magnetic
scattering is incommensurate with the lattice and is characterized by
long-range order in the copper-oxide plane with the spin direction identical to
that in the insulator. Between neighboring planes, the spins exhibit
short-range correlations with a stacking arrangement reminiscent of that in the
undoped antiferromagnetic insulator. The elastic magnetic peak intensity
appears at the same temperature within the errors as the superconductivity,
suggesting that the two phenomena are strongly correlated. These observations
directly reveal the persistent influence of the antiferromagnetic order as the
doping level increases from the insulator to the superconductor. In addition,
our results confirm that spin density wave order for incommensurabilities near
1/8 is a robust feature of the La2CuO4-based superconductors.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, includes 8 figure
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