46 research outputs found
Phase diagram of magnetic domain walls in spin valve nano-stripes
We investigate numerically the transverse versus vortex phase diagram of
head-to-head domain walls in Co/Cu/Py spin valve nano-stripes (Py: Permalloy),
in which the Co layer is mostly single domain while the Py layer hosts the
domain wall. The range of stability of the transverse wall is shifted towards
larger thickness compared to single Py layers, due to a magnetostatic screening
effect between the two layers. An approached analytical scaling law is derived,
which reproduces faithfully the phase diagram.Comment: 4 page
Interferometric imaging of intensely radiating negative leaders
The common phenomenon of lightning still harbors many secrets and only recently a new propagation mode was observed for negative leaders. While propagating in this `Intensely Radiating Negative Leader\u27 (IRNL) mode a negative leader emits 100 times more very-high frequency (VHF) and broadband radiation than a more normal negative leader. We have reported that this mode occurs soon after initiation of all lightning flashes we have mapped as well as sometimes long thereafter. Because of the profuse emission of VHF the leader structure is very difficult to image. In this work we report on measurements made with the LOFAR radio telescope, an instrument primarily built for radio-astronomy observations. For this reason, as part of the present work, we have refined our time resolved interferometric 3-Dimensional (TRI-D) imaging to take into account the antenna function. The images from the TRI-D imager show that during an IRNL there is an ionization front with a diameter in excess of 500~m where strong corona bursts occur. This is very different from what is seen for a normal negative leader where the corona bursts happen at the tip, an area of typically 10~m in diameter. The observed massive ionization wave supports the idea that this mode is indicative of a dense charge pocket
Interferometric imaging of intensely radiating negative leaders
The common phenomenon of lightning still harbors many secrets and only recently a new propagation mode was observed for negative leaders. While propagating in this "intensely radiating negative leader"(IRNL) mode a negative leader emits 100 times more very-high frequency (VHF) and broadband radiation than a more normal negative leader. We have reported that this mode occurs soon after initiation of all lightning flashes we have mapped as well as sometimes long thereafter. Because of the profuse emission of VHF the leader structure is very difficult to image. In this work we report on measurements made with the LOFAR radio telescope, an instrument primarily built for radio-astronomy observations. For this reason, as part of the present work, we have refined our time resolved interferometric 3-dimensional (TRI-D) imaging to take into account the antenna function. The images from the TRI-D imager show that during an IRNL there is an ionization front with a diameter in excess of 500 m where strong corona bursts occur. This is very different from what is seen for a normal negative leader where the corona bursts happen at the tip, an area of typically 10 m in diameter. The observed massive ionization wave supports the idea that this mode is indicative of a dense charge pocket
X-Ray Analysis of Oxygen-induced Perpendicular Magnetic Anisotropy in Pt/Co/AlOx trilayer
X-ray spectroscopy measurements have been performed on a series of Pt/Co/AlOx
trilayers to investigate the role of Co oxidation in the perpendicular magnetic
anisotropy of the Co/AlOx interface. It is observed that high temperature
annealing modifies the magnetic properties of the Co layer, inducing an
enhancement of the perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. The microscopic
structural properties are analyzed via X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy, X-ray
Magnetic Circular Dichroism and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy measurements.
It is shown that annealing enhances the amount of interfacial oxide, which may
be at the origin of a strong perpendicular magnetic anisotropy
A distinct negative leader propagation mode
The common phenomenon of lightning still harbors many secrets such as what are the conditions for lightning initiation and what is driving the discharge to propagate over several tens of kilometers through the atmosphere forming conducting ionized channels called leaders. Since lightning is an electric discharge phenomenon, there are positively and negatively charged leaders. In this work we report on measurements made with the LOFAR radio telescope, an instrument primarily build for radio-astronomy observations. It is observed that a negative leader rather suddenly changes, for a few milliseconds, into a mode where it radiates 100 times more VHF power than typical negative leaders after which it spawns a large number of more typical negative leaders. This mode occurs during the initial stage, soon after initiation, of all lightning flashes we have mapped (about 25). For some flashes this mode occurs also well after initiation and we show one case where it is triggered twice, some 100 ms apart. We postulate that this is indicative of a small (order of 5 km2) high charge pocket. Lightning thus appears to be initiated exclusively in the vicinity of such a small but dense charge pocket
The Initial Stage of Cloud Lightning Imaged in High Resolution
With LOFAR we have been able to image the development of lightning flashes
with meter-scale accuracy and unprecedented detail. We discuss the primary
steps behind our most recent lightning mapping method. To demonstrate the
capabilities of our technique we show and interpret images of the first few
milliseconds of two intra-cloud flashes. In all our flashes the negative
leaders propagate in the charge layer below the main negative charge. Among
several interesting features we show that in about 2~ms after initiation the
Primary Initial Leader triggers the formation of a multitude (more than ten)
negative leaders in a rather confined area of the atmosphere. From these only
one or two continue to propagate after about 30~ms to extend over kilometers
horizontally while another may propagate back to the initiation point. We also
show that normal negative leaders can transition into an initial-leader like
state, potentially in the presence of strong electric fields. In addition, we
show some initial breakdown pulses that occurred during the primary initial
leader, and even during two "secondary" initial leaders that developed out of
stepped leaders.Comment: Submitted to Journal of geophysics research: Atmosphere
Discontinuous properties of current-induced magnetic domain wall depinning
The current-induced motion of magnetic domain walls (DWs) confined to nanostructures is of great interest for fundamental studies as well as for technological applications in spintronic devices. Here, we present magnetic images showing the depinning properties of pulse-current-driven domain walls in well-shaped Permalloy nanowires obtained using photoemission electron microscopy combined with X-ray magnetic circular dichroism. In the vicinity of the threshold current density (J th = 4.2 × 10 11 â.A.m-2) for the DW motion, discontinuous DW depinning and motion have been observed as a sequence of "Barkhausen jumps". A one-dimensional analytical model with a piecewise parabolic pinning potential has been introduced to reproduce the DW hopping between two nearest neighbour sites, which reveals the dynamical nature of the current-driven DW motion in the depinning regime