1,303 research outputs found
Thermal switching rate of a ferromagnetic material with uniaxial anisotropy
The field dependence of the thermal switching rate of a ferromagnetic
material with uniaxial anisotropy was studied by solving the Fokker-Planck
equation. We derived the analytical expression of the thermal switching rate
using the mean first-passage time approach, and found that Brown's formula
[Phys. Rev. 130, 1677 (1963)] is applicable even in the low barrier limit by
replacing the attempt frequency with the proper factor which is expressed by
the error function.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Breakdown of `phase rigidity' and variations of the Fano effect in closed Aharonov-Bohm interferometers
Although the conductance of a closed Aharonov-Bohm interferometer, with a
quantum dot on one branch, obeys the Onsager symmetry under magnetic field
reversal, it needs not be a periodic function of this field: the conductance
maxima move with both the field and the gate voltage on the dot, in an apparent
breakdown of `phase rigidity'. These experimental findings are explained
theoretically as resulting from multiple electronic paths around the
interferometer ring. Data containing several Coulomb blockade peaks, whose
shapes change with the magnetic flux, are fitted to a simple model, in which
each resonant level on the dot couples to a different path around the ring
Large amplitude microwave emission and reduced nonlinear phase noise in Co2Fe(Ge0.5Ga0.5) Heusler alloy based pseudo spin valve nanopillars
We have studied microwave emission from a current-perpendicular-to-plane
pseudo spin valve nanopillars with Heusler alloy Co2Fe(Ga0.5Ge0.5) electrodes.
Large emission amplitude exceeding 150 nV/Hz^0.5, partly owing to the large
magnetoresistance, and narrow generation linewidth below 10 MHz are observed.
We also find that the linewidth shows significant dependence on the applied
field magnitude and its angle within the film plane. A minimum in the linewidth
is observed when the slope of the frequency versus current becomes near zero.
This agrees with theoretical prediction that takes into account non-linear
phase noise as a source for linewidth broadening
Exact location of the multicritical point for finite-dimensional spin glasses: A conjecture
We present a conjecture on the exact location of the multicritical point in
the phase diagram of spin glass models in finite dimensions. By generalizing
our previous work, we combine duality and gauge symmetry for replicated random
systems to derive formulas which make it possible to understand all the
relevant available numerical results in a unified way. The method applies to
non-self-dual lattices as well as to self dual cases, in the former case of
which we derive a relation for a pair of values of multicritical points for
mutually dual lattices. The examples include the +-J and Gaussian Ising spin
glasses on the square, hexagonal and triangular lattices, the Potts and Z_q
models with chiral randomness on these lattices, and the three-dimensional +-J
Ising spin glass and the random plaquette gauge model.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figure
Growth of primordial black holes in a universe containing a massless scalar field
The evolution of primordial black holes in a flat Friedmann universe with a
massless scalar field is investigated in fully general relativistic numerical
relativity. A primordial black hole is expected to form with a scale comparable
to the cosmological apparent horizon, in which case it may go through an
initial phase with significant accretion. However, if it is very close to the
cosmological apparent horizon size, the accretion is suppressed due to general
relativistic effects. In any case, it soon gets smaller than the cosmological
horizon and thereafter it can be approximated as an isolated vacuum solution
with decaying mass accretion. In this situation the dynamical and inhomogeneous
scalar field is typically equivalent to a perfect fluid with a stiff equation
of state . The black hole mass never increases by more than a factor of
two, despite recent claims that primordial black holes might grow substantially
through accreting quintessence. It is found that the gravitational memory
scenario, proposed for primordial black holes in Brans-Dicke and scalar-tensor
theories of gravity, is highly unphysical.Comment: 24 pages, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Nonradial oscillations of quark stars
Recently, it has been reported that a candidate for a quark star may have
been observed. In this article, we pay attention to quark stars with radiation
radii in the reported range. We calculate nonradial oscillations of -, -
and -modes. Then, we find that the dependence of the -mode
quasi-normal frequency on the bag constant and stellar radiation radius is very
strong and different from that of the lowest -mode quasi-normal
frequency. Furthermore we deduce a new empirical formula between the -mode
frequency of gravitational waves and the parameter of the equation of state for
quark stars. The observation of gravitational waves both of the -mode and of
the lowest -mode would provide a powerful probe for the equation of
state of quark matter and the properties of quark stars.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.
Direct Detection of Electroweak-Interacting Dark Matter
Assuming that the lightest neutral component in an SU(2)L gauge multiplet is
the main ingredient of dark matter in the universe, we calculate the elastic
scattering cross section of the dark matter with nucleon, which is an important
quantity for the direct detection experiments. When the dark matter is a real
scalar or a Majorana fermion which has only electroweak gauge interactions, the
scattering with quarks and gluon are induced through one- and two-loop quantum
processes, respectively, and both of them give rise to comparable contributions
to the elastic scattering cross section. We evaluate all of the contributions
at the leading order and find that there is an accidental cancellation among
them. As a result, the spin-independent cross section is found to be
O(10^-(46-48)) cm^2, which is far below the current experimental bounds.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, published versio
Black Hole Evaporation in an Expanding Universe
We calculate the quantum radiation power of black holes which are asymptotic
to the Einstein-de Sitter universe at spatial and null infinities. We consider
two limiting mass accretion scenarios, no accretion and significant accretion.
We find that the radiation power strongly depends on not only the asymptotic
condition but also the mass accretion scenario. For the no accretion case, we
consider the Einstein-Straus solution, where a black hole of constant mass
resides in the dust Friedmann universe. We find negative cosmological
correction besides the expected redshift factor. This is given in terms of the
cubic root of ratio in size of the black hole to the cosmological horizon, so
that it is currently of order but could have been significant at the formation epoch of
primordial black holes. Due to the cosmological effects, this black hole has
not settled down to an equilibrium state. This cosmological correction may be
interpreted in an analogy with the radiation from a moving mirror in a flat
spacetime. For the significant accretion case, we consider the Sultana-Dyer
solution, where a black hole tends to increase its mass in proportion to the
cosmological scale factor. In this model, we find that the radiation power is
apparently the same as the Hawking radiation from the Schwarzschild black hole
of which mass is that of the growing mass at each moment. Hence, the energy
loss rate decreases and tends to vanish as time proceeds. Consequently, the
energy loss due to evaporation is insignificant compared to huge mass accretion
onto the black hole. Based on this model, we propose a definition of
quasi-equilibrium temperature for general conformal stationary black holes.Comment: Accepted for publication in Class.Quant.Grav., 18 pages and 3 figure
No Go Theorem for Kinematic Self-Similarity with A Polytropic Equation of State
We have investigated spherically symmetric spacetimes which contain a perfect
fluid obeying the polytropic equation of state and admit a kinematic
self-similar vector of the second kind which is neither parallel nor orthogonal
to the fluid flow. We have assumed two kinds of polytropic equations of state
and shown in general relativity that such spacetimes must be vacuum.Comment: 5 pages, no figures. Revtex. One word added to the title. Final
version to appear in Physical Review D as a Brief Repor
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