119 research outputs found
Thermoelectric response near a quantum critical point of beta-YbAlB4 and YbRh2Si2: A comparative study
The thermoelectric coefficients have been measured on the Yb-based heavy
fermion compounds beta-YbAlB4 and YbRh2Si2 down to a very low temperature. We
observe a striking difference in the behavior of the Seebeck coefficient, S in
the vicinity of the Quantum Critical Point (QCP) in the two systems. As the
critical field is approached, S/T enhances in beta-YbAlB4 but is drastically
reduced in YbRh2Si2. While in the former system, the ratio of
thermopower-to-specific heat remains constant, it drastically drops near the
QCP in YbRh2Si2. In both systems, on the other hand, the Nernst coefficient
shows a diverging behavior near the QCP. The results provide a new window to
the way various energy scales of the system behave and eventually vanish near a
QCP
Sensitivity of the superconducting state and magnetic susceptibility to key aspects of electronic structure in ferropnictides
Experiments on the iron-pnictide superconductors appear to show some
materials where the ground state is fully gapped, and others where low-energy
excitations dominate, possibly indicative of gap nodes. Within the framework of
a 5-orbital spin fluctuation theory for these systems, we discuss how changes
in the doping, the electronic structure or interaction parameters can tune the
system from a fully gapped to nodal sign-changing gap with s-wave ()
symmetry (). In particular we focus on the role of the hole pocket at
the point of the unfolded Brillouin zone identified as crucial to
the pairing by Kuroki {\it et al.}, and show that its presence leads to
additional nesting of hole and electron pockets which stabilizes the isotropic
state. The pocket's contribution to the pairing can be tuned by doping,
surface effects, and by changes in interaction parameters, which we examine.
Analytic expressions for orbital pairing vertices calculated within the RPA
fluctuation exchange approximation allow us to draw connections between aspects
of electronic structure, interaction parameters, and the form of the
superconducting gap
Development and Function of Invariant Natural Killer T Cells Producing TH2- and TH17-Cytokines
Four distinct subsets of invariant natural killer T (NKT) cells are shown to differentiate in the thymus, then migrate to peripheral tissues where they retain their phenotypic and functional characteristics
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