1,282 research outputs found
Concept for a Time-of-Flight Small Angle Neutron Scattering Instrument at the European Spallation Source
A new Small Angle Neutron Scattering instrument is proposed for the European
Spallation Source. The pulsed source requires a time-of-flight analysis of the
gathered neutrons at the detector. The optimal instrument length is found to be
rather large, which allows for a polarizer and a versatile collimation. The
polarizer allows for studying magnetic samples and incoherent background
subtraction. The wide collimation will host VSANS and SESANS options that
increase the resolution of the instrument towards um and tens of um,
respectively. Two 1m2 area detectors will cover a large solid angle
simultaneously. The expected gains for this new instrument will lie in the
range between 20 and 36, depending on the assessment criteria, when compared to
up-to-date reactor based instruments. This will open new perspectives for fast
kinetics, weakly scattering samples, and multi-dimensional contrast variation
studies.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
How should we interpret the two transport relaxation times in the cuprates ?
We observe that the appearance of two transport relaxation times in the
various transport coefficients of cuprate metals may be understood in terms of
scattering processes that discriminate between currents that are even, or odd
under the charge conjugation operator. We develop a transport equation that
illustrates these ideas and discuss its experimental and theoretical
consequences.Comment: 19 pages, RevTeX with 8 postscript figures included. To appear in
``Non Fermi Liquid Physics'', J. Phys:Cond. Matt. (1997
High spin polarization in the ferromagnetic filled skutterudites KFe4Sb12 and NaFe4Sb12
The spin polarization of ferromagnetic alkali-metal iron antimonides KFe4Sb12
and NaFe4Sb12 is studied by point-contact Andreev reflection using
superconducting Nb and Pb tips. From these measurements an intrinsic transport
spin polarization Pt of 67% and 60% for the K and Na compound, respectively, is
inferred which establishes these materials as a new class of highly spin
polarized ferromagnets. The results are in accord with band structure
calculations within the local spin density approximation (LSDA) that predict
nearly 100% spin polarization in the density of states. We discuss the impact
of calculated Fermi velocities and spin fluctuations on Pt.Comment: Pdf file with fi
Subpicosecond time‐resolved studies of coherent phonon oscillations in thin‐film YBa2Cu3O6+x (x<0.4)
We report the results of the first time‐resolved observation of impulsively generated coherent optical phonon oscillations in the semiconducting cuprate compound YBa2Cu3O6+x (x<0.4). The oscillations, which were probed through time‐resolved transmissivity modulation, had a period of 237 fs at room temperature, corresponding to a Raman active mode of A1g symmetry at 142 cm−1. No oscillations were observed in the superconducting form of Y‐Ba‐Cu‐O either above or below Tc. The amplitude, frequency, and linewidth of this mode were measured over a temperature range from ∼7 K to room temperature.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70769/2/APPLAB-58-9-980-1.pd
The impact of phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity on results of genome wide association studies of complex diseases
Phenotypic misclassification (between cases) has been shown to reduce the power to detect association in genetic studies. However, it is conceivable that complex traits are heterogeneous with respect to individual genetic susceptibility and disease pathophysiology, and that the effect of heterogeneity has a larger magnitude than the effect of phenotyping errors. Although an intuitively clear concept, the effect of heterogeneity on genetic studies of common diseases has received little attention. Here we investigate the impact of phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity on the statistical power of genome wide association studies (GWAS). We first performed a study of simulated genotypic and phenotypic data. Next, we analyzed the Wellcome Trust Case-Control Consortium (WTCCC) data for diabetes mellitus (DM) type 1 (T1D) and type 2 (T2D), using varying proportions of each type of diabetes in order to examine the impact of heterogeneity on the strength and statistical significance of association previously found in the WTCCC data. In both simulated and real data, heterogeneity (presence of "non-cases") reduced the statistical power to detect genetic association and greatly decreased the estimates of risk attributed to genetic variation. This finding was also supported by the analysis of loci validated in subsequent large-scale meta-analyses. For example, heterogeneity of 50% increases the required sample size by approximately three times. These results suggest that accurate phenotype delineation may be more important for detecting true genetic associations than increase in sample size
Low temperature ferromagnetic properties of the diluted magnetic semiconductor Sb2-xCrxTe3
We report on magnetic and electrical transport properties of Sb2-xCrxTe3
single crystals with 0 <= x <= 0.095 over temperatures from 2 K to 300 K. A
ferromagnetic state develops in these crystals at low temperatures with Curie
temperatures that are proportional to x (for x > 0.014), attaining a maximum
value of 20 K for x = 0.095. Hysteresis below TC for applied field parallel to
the c-axis is observed in both magnetization and Hall effect measurements.
Magnetic as well as transport data indicate that Cr takes the 3+ (3d3) valence
state, substituting for antimony in the host lattice structure, and does not
significantly affect the background hole concentration. Analysis of the
anomalous Hall effect reveals that skew scattering is responsible for its
presence. These results broaden the scope of ferromagnetism in the V2-VI3
diluted magnetic semiconductors (DMS) and in ferromagnetic DMS structures
generallyComment: 24 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Observation of Magnetic Flux Generated Spontaneously During a Rapid Quench of Superconducting Films
We report observations of spontaneous formation of magnetic flux lines during
a rapid quench of YBaCuO films through T. This
effect is predicted according to the Kibble-Zurek mechanism of creation of
topological defects of the order parameter during a symmetry-breaking phase
transition. Our previous experiment, at a quench rate of 20K/sec, gave null
results. In the present experiment, the quench rate was increased to
\TEXTsymbol{>} 10 K/sec. Within experimental resolution, the dependence
of the measured flux on the cooling rate is consistent with the prediction
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