1,744 research outputs found
Transport properties of iron at the Earth's core conditions: the effect of spin disorder
The electronic and thermal transport properties of the Earth's core are
crucial for many geophysical models such as the geodynamo model of the Earth's
magnetic field and of its reversals. Here we show, by considering bcc-iron and
iron-rich iron-silicon alloy as a representative of the Earth's core
composition and applying the first-principles modeling that the spin disorder
at the Earth's core conditions provides an essential contribution, of order
20~\,cm, to the electrical resistivity. This value is comparable in
magnitude with the electron-phonon and with the recently estimated
electron-electron scattering contributions. The origin of the spin-disorder
resistivity (SDR) consists in the existence of fluctuating local moments that
are stabilized at high temperatures by the magnetic entropy even at pressures
at which the ground state of iron is non-magnetic. We find that electron-phonon
and SDR contributions are not additive at high temperatures. We thus observe a
large violation of the Matthiessen rule, not common in conventional metallic
alloys at ambient conditions.Comment: 4 figure
Effect of interface states on spin-dependent tunneling in Fe/MgO/Fe tunnel junctions
The electronic structure and spin-dependent tunneling in epitaxial
Fe/MgO/Fe(001) tunnel junctions are studied using first-principles
calculations. For small MgO barrier thickness the minority-spin resonant bands
at the two interfaces make a significant contribution to the tunneling
conductance for the antiparallel magnetization, whereas these bands are, in
practice, mismatched by disorder and/or small applied bias for the parallel
magnetization. This explains the experimentally observed decrease in tunneling
magnetoresistance (TMR) for thin MgO barriers. We predict that a monolayer of
Ag epitaxially deposited at the interface between Fe and MgO suppresses
tunneling through the interface band and may thus be used to enhance the TMR
for thin barriers.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures (2 in color), revtex
Conductance calculations for quantum wires and interfaces: mode matching and Green functions
Landauer's formula relates the conductance of a quantum wire or interface to
transmission probabilities. Total transmission probabilities are frequently
calculated using Green function techniques and an expression first derived by
Caroli. Alternatively, partial transmission probabilities can be calculated
from the scattering wave functions that are obtained by matching the wave
functions in the scattering region to the Bloch modes of ideal bulk leads. An
elegant technique for doing this, formulated originally by Ando, is here
generalized to any Hamiltonian that can be represented in tight-binding form. A
more compact expression for the transmission matrix elements is derived and it
is shown how all the Green function results can be derived from the mode
matching technique. We illustrate this for a simple model which can be studied
analytically, and for an Fe|vacuum|Fe tunnel junction which we study using
first-principles calculations.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Circadian Timing of Food Intake Contributes to Weight Gain
Studies of body weight regulation have focused almost entirely on caloric intake and energy expenditure. However, a number of recent studies in animals linking energy regulation and the circadian clock at the molecular, physiological, and behavioral levels raise the possibility that the timing of food intake itself may play a significant role in weight gain. The present study focused on the role of the circadian phase of food consumption in weight gain. We provide evidence that nocturnal mice fed a high‐fat diet only during the 12‐h light phase gain significantly more weight than mice fed only during the 12‐h dark phase. A better understanding of the role of the circadian system for weight gain could have important implications for developing new therapeutic strategies for combating the obesity epidemic facing the human population today
Thermopower of a superconducting single-electron transistor
We present a linear-response theory for the thermopower of a single-electron
transistor consisting of a superconducting island weakly coupled to two
normal-conducting leads (NSN SET). The thermopower shows oscillations with the
same periodicity as the conductance and is rather sensitive to the size of the
superconducting gap. In particular, the previously studied sawtooth-like shape
of the thermopower for a normal-conducting single-electron device is
qualitatively changed even for small gap energies.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Universal spectral form factor for chaotic dynamics
We consider the semiclassical limit of the spectral form factor of
fully chaotic dynamics. Starting from the Gutzwiller type double sum over
classical periodic orbits we set out to recover the universal behavior
predicted by random-matrix theory, both for dynamics with and without time
reversal invariance. For times smaller than half the Heisenberg time
, we extend the previously known -expansion to
include the cubic term. Beyond confirming random-matrix behavior of individual
spectra, the virtue of that extension is that the ``diagrammatic rules'' come
in sight which determine the families of orbit pairs responsible for all orders
of the -expansion.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Quasiparticle decay rate of Josephson charge qubit oscillations
We analyze the decay of Rabi oscillations in a charge qubit consisting of a
Cooper pair box connected to a finite-size superconductor by a Josephson
junction. We concentrate on the contribution of quasiparticles in the
superconductors to the decay rate. Passing of a quasiparticle through the
Josephson junction tunes the qubit away from the charge degeneracy, thus
spoiling the Rabi oscillations. We find the temperature dependence of the
quasiparticle contribution to the decay rate for open and isolated systems. The
former case is realized if a normal-state trap is included in the circuit, or
if just one vortex resides in the qubit; the decay rate has an activational
temperature dependence with the activation energy equal to the superconducting
gap . In a superconducting qubit isolated from the environment, the
activation energy equals if the number of electrons is even, while
for an odd number of electrons the decay rate of an excited qubit state remains
finite in the limit of zero temperature. We estimate the decay rate for
realistic parameters of a qubit.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, final version as published in PRB, minor change
First-principles calculations of magnetization relaxation in pure Fe, Co, and Ni with frozen thermal lattice disorder
The effect of the electron-phonon interaction on magnetization relaxation is
studied within the framework of first-principles scattering theory for Fe, Co,
and Ni by displacing atoms in the scattering region randomly with a thermal
distribution. This "frozen thermal lattice disorder" approach reproduces the
non-monotonic damping behaviour observed in ferromagnetic resonance
measurements and yields reasonable quantitative agreement between calculated
and experimental values. It can be readily applied to alloys and easily
extended by determining the atomic displacements from ab initio phonon spectra
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