16,459 research outputs found
Revealing common artifacts due to ferromagnetic inclusions in highly-oriented pyrolytic graphite
We report on an extensive investigation to figure out the origin of
room-temperature ferromagnetism that is commonly observed by SQUID magnetometry
in highly-oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). Electron backscattering and X-ray
microanalysis revealed the presence of micron-size magnetic clusters
(predominantly Fe) that are rare and would be difficult to detect without
careful search in a scanning electron microscope in the backscattering mode.
The clusters pin to crystal boundaries and their quantities match the amplitude
of typical ferromagnetic signals. No ferromagnetic response is detected in
samples where we could not find such magnetic inclusions. Our experiments show
that the frequently reported ferromagnetism in pristine HOPG is most likely to
originate from contamination with Fe-rich inclusions introduced presumably
during crystal growth.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Metamaterials: optical activity without chirality
We report that the classical phenomenon of optical activity, which is traditionally associated with chirality (helicity) of organic molecules, proteins, and inorganic structures, can be observed in artificial planar media which exhibit neither 3D nor 2D chirality. We observe the effect in the microwave and optical parts of the spectrum at oblique incidence to regular arrays of nonchiral subwavelength metamolecules in the form of strong circular dichroism and birefringence indistinguishable from those of chiral three-dimensional media
Metamaterial with polarization and direction insensitive resonant transmission response mimicking electromagnetically induced transparency
We report on a planar metamaterial, the resonant transmission frequency of which does not depend on the polarization and angle of incidence of electromagnetic waves. The resonance results from the excitation of high-Q antisymmetric trapped current mode and shows sharp phase dispersion characteristic to Fano-type resonances of the electromagnetically induced transparency phenomenon
A microscopic investigation of the transition form factor in the region of collective multipole excitations of stable and unstable nuclei
We have used a self-consistent Skyrme-Hartree-Fock plus Continuum-RPA model
to study the low-multipole response of stable and neutron/proton-rich Ni and Sn
isotopes. We focus on the momentum-transfer dependence of the strength
distribution, as it provides information on the structure of excited nuclear
states and in particular on the variations of the transition form factor (TFF)
with the energy. Our results show, among other things, that the TFF may show
significant energy dependence in the region of the isoscalar giant monopole
resonance and that the TFF corresponding to the threshold strength in the case
of neutron-rich nuclei is different compared to the one corresponding to the
respective giant resonance. Perspectives are given for more detailed future
investigations.Comment: 13 pages, incl. 9 figures; to appear in J.Phys.G,
http://www.iop.org/EJ/jphys
Numerical modeling of quasiplanar giant water waves
In this work we present a further analytical development and a numerical
implementation of the recently suggested theoretical model for highly nonlinear
potential long-crested water waves, where weak three-dimensional effects are
included as small corrections to exact two-dimensional equations written in the
conformal variables [V.P. Ruban, Phys. Rev. E 71, 055303(R) (2005)]. Numerical
experiments based on this theory describe the spontaneous formation of a single
weakly three-dimensional large-amplitude wave (alternatively called freak,
killer, rogue or giant wave) on the deep water.Comment: revtex4, 8 pages, 7 figure
Stable directions for small nonlinear Dirac standing waves
We prove that for a Dirac operator with no resonance at thresholds nor
eigenvalue at thresholds the propagator satisfies propagation and dispersive
estimates. When this linear operator has only two simple eigenvalues close
enough, we study an associated class of nonlinear Dirac equations which have
stationary solutions. As an application of our decay estimates, we show that
these solutions have stable directions which are tangent to the subspaces
associated with the continuous spectrum of the Dirac operator. This result is
the analogue, in the Dirac case, of a theorem by Tsai and Yau about the
Schr\"{o}dinger equation. To our knowledge, the present work is the first
mathematical study of the stability problem for a nonlinear Dirac equation.Comment: 62 page
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