144 research outputs found

    Experimental cell with a Fabry-Perot resonator tuned in situ for magnetic resonance studies of matrix-isolated radicals at temperatures below 1 K

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    We describe the design and construction of an experimental cell for the study of free radicals in macroscopically thick films of solidified molecular and rare gases by 128 GHz Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) at temperatures below 1 K. The ESR resonator has an open Fabry-Perot design, and its frequency can be tunedin situby adjusting the spacing between the mirrors. The tuning mechanism consists of a piezo positioner and a stainless-steel edge-welded bellows, which can change the resonator frequency by at least 6 GHz. The films of solidified gases can be deposited either directly from a room temperature reservoir or by recondensing from a specially arranged chamber. The free radicals can be created in the solid films by dissociating matrix species by running an rf discharge in a helium vapor. We suggest that such a sample cell design can also be used for a broad range of low-temperature ESR experiments where sample cooling needs to be enhanced by the presence of superfluid helium

    Formation of Nuclear-Polarized Phases of H Atoms Embedded in Solid H-2 Films

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    We report on an experimental observation of two phases of hydrogen atoms in solid H-2 films at temperatures of 0.1-0.8 K, characterized by a large enhancement of the nuclear spin polarization compared to that given by Boltzmann statistics (p = 0.15 at T = 0.15 K). The first phase with p = 0.35(5) is formed spontaneously during sample storage in a high magnetic field (B = 4.6 T). The second phase with an even higher nuclear polarization, p = 0.75(7), can be achieved at T <= 0.55 K by repeating sequences of dynamic nuclear polarization followed by a system relaxation. Upon warming through the range 0.55-0.65 K, the highly nuclear-polarized phase undergoes a phase transition to the spontaneously polarized phase which breaks down at T similar or equal to 0.8 K, and the nuclear polarization gradually converges to the Boltzmann distribution. We discuss possible scenarios for explaining the nature of the observed phenomena

    Purely spatial diffusion of H atoms in solid normal- and para-hydrogen films

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    We present an experimental study of quantum diffusion of atomic hydrogen in solid H-2 films at temperatures below 1 K. The atoms are generated via electron impact dissociation by running a continuous rf discharge in helium gas above the H-2 film for long (up to 30 days) times. We are able to distinguish between the diffusion of the atoms moving towards each other followed by their recombination and the pure spatial diffusion driven by the density gradient. We found that in both cases the flux of phonons generated by the discharge above the surface of molecular film is essential to observe the slow diffusive motion. We obtained rates of pure spatial diffusion of H atoms in normal-H-2 (75% ortho, 25% para) films which were two orders of magnitude faster than those obtained from the H atom recombination, the quantity used in all previous work to characterize the mobility of H atoms in solid H-2. We investigated the influence of the film thickness and its ortho-para composition on recombination and pure spatial diffusion. For thin enough films of 0.16 mu m we observed complete diffusion of the H atoms through the entire film thickness. We observed peculiar behavior of the samples with ortho-H-2 (o-H-2) concentration below 5%. The recombination rate in these samples was an order of magnitude faster while the rate of spatial diffusion was somewhat slower than in films containing larger o-H-2 concentrations. The rate of production of H atoms in the low o-H-2 samples turned out to be an order of magnitude larger. We discuss possible explanations of these somewhat contradictory observations

    Conformal algebra: R-matrix and star-triangle relation

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    The main purpose of this paper is the construction of the R-operator which acts in the tensor product of two infinite-dimensional representations of the conformal algebra and solves Yang-Baxter equation. We build the R-operator as a product of more elementary operators S_1, S_2 and S_3. Operators S_1 and S_3 are identified with intertwining operators of two irreducible representations of the conformal algebra and the operator S_2 is obtained from the intertwining operators S_1 and S_3 by a certain duality transformation. There are star-triangle relations for the basic building blocks S_1, S_2 and S_3 which produce all other relations for the general R-operators. In the case of the conformal algebra of n-dimensional Euclidean space we construct the R-operator for the scalar (spin part is equal to zero) representations and prove that the star-triangle relation is a well known star-triangle relation for propagators of scalar fields. In the special case of the conformal algebra of the 4-dimensional Euclidean space, the R-operator is obtained for more general class of infinite-dimensional (differential) representations with nontrivial spin parts. As a result, for the case of the 4-dimensional Euclidean space, we generalize the scalar star-triangle relation to the most general star-triangle relation for the propagators of particles with arbitrary spins.Comment: Added references and corrected typo

    Evidence for melting of HD and D-2 clusters in solid neon below 1 K

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    We report on an electron spin resonance study of H and D atoms stabilized in solid mixtures of neon, molecular deuterium, and hydrogen deuteride. We observed that H and D atoms can be stabilized in pure HD and D-2 clusters formed in pores of solid Ne as well as in a Ne environment. Raising temperature from 0.1 to 1.3 K results in a rapid recombination of a significant fraction of both H and D atoms in HD and D-2 clusters. The recombination rate appears to be five and seven orders of magnitude faster than in solid bulk samples of HD and D-2, respectively. We explain this recombination rate enhancement by melting of clusters of molecular hydrogen isotopes, similar to what has been observed for atomic hydrogen in H-2 clusters [Sheludiakov et al., Phys. Rev. B 97, 104108 (2018)]. Our observations do not provide evidence for a superfluid behavior of these clusters at temperatures of 0.1-1.3 K

    Electron spin resonance study of atomic hydrogen stabilized in solid neon below 1 K

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    We report on an electron spin resonance study of atomic hydrogen stabilized in solid Ne matrices carried out at a high field of 4.6 T and temperatures below 1 K. The films of Ne, slowly deposited on the substrate at a temperature of similar to 1 K, exhibited a high degree of porosity. We found that H atoms may be trapped in two different substitutional positions in the Ne lattice as well as inside clusters of pure molecular H-2 in the pores of the Ne film. The latter type of atoms was very unstable against recombination at temperatures 0.3-0.6 K. Based on the observed nearly instant decays after rapid small increases of temperature, we evaluate the lower limit of the recombination rate constant k(r) >= 5 x 10(-20) cm(3) s(-1) at 0.6 K, five orders of magnitude larger than that previously found in the thin films of pure H-2 at the same temperature. Such behavior assumes a very high mobility of atoms and may indicate a solid-to-liquid transition for H-2 clusters of certain sizes, similar to that observed in experiments with H-2 clusters inside helium droplets [Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 205301 (2008)]. We found that the efficiency of dissociation of H-2 in neon films is enhanced by two orders of magnitude compared to that in pure H-2 as a result of the strong action of secondary electrons

    Identical spin rotation effect and electron spin waves in quantum gas of atomic hydrogen

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    We present an experimental study of electron spin waves in atomic hydrogen gas compressed to high densities of similar to 5 x 10(18) cm(-3) at temperatures ranging from 0.26 to 0.6 K in the strong magnet ic field of 4.6 T. Hydrogen gas is in a quantum regime when the thermal de-Broglie wavelength is much larger than the s-wave scattering length. In this regime the identical particle effects play a major role in atomic collisions and lead to the identical spin rotation effect (ISR). We observed a variety of spin wave modes caused by this effect with strong dependence on the magnetic potential caused by variations of the polarizing magnetic field. We demonstrate confinement of the ISR modes in the magnetic potential and manipulate their properties by changing the spatial profile of the magnetic field. We have found that at a high enough density of H gas the magnons accumulate in their ground state in the magnetic trap and exhibit long coherence, which has a profound effect on the electron spin resonance spectra. Such macroscopic accumulation of the ground state occurs at a certain critical density of hydrogen gas, where the chemical potential of the magnons becomes equal to the energy of their ground state in the trapping potential

    Thawing of permafrost may disturb historic cattle burial grounds in East Siberia

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    Climate warming in the Arctic may increase the risk of zoonoses due to expansion of vector habitats, improved chances of vector survival during winter, and permafrost degradation. Monitoring of soil temperatures at Siberian cryology control stations since 1970 showed correlations between air temperatures and the depth of permafrost layer that thawed during summer season. Between 1900s and 1980s, the temperature of surface layer of permafrost increased by 2–4°C; and a further increase of 3°C is expected. Frequent outbreaks of anthrax caused death of 1.5 million deer in Russian North between 1897 and 1925. Anthrax among people or cattle has been reported in 29,000 settlements of the Russian North, including more than 200 Yakutia settlements, which are located near the burial grounds of cattle that died from anthrax. Statistically significant positive trends in annual average temperatures were established in 8 out of 17 administrative districts of Yakutia for which sufficient meteorological data were available. At present, it is not known whether further warming of the permafrost will lead to the release of viable anthrax organisms. Nevertheless, we suggest that it would be prudent to undertake careful monitoring of permafrost conditions in all areas where an anthrax outbreak had occurred in the past

    Wave modes of collective vortex gyration in dipolar-coupled-dot-array magnonic crystals

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    Lattice vibration modes are collective excitations in periodic arrays of atoms or molecules. These modes determine novel transport properties in solid crystals. Analogously, in periodical arrangements of magnetic vortex-state disks, collective vortex motions have been predicted. Here, we experimentally observe wave modes of collective vortex gyration in one-dimensional (1D) periodic arrays of magnetic disks using time-resolved scanning transmission x-ray microscopy. The observed modes are interpreted based on micromagnetic simulation and numerical calculation of coupled Thiele equations. Dispersion of the modes is found to be strongly affected by both vortex polarization and chirality ordering, as revealed by the explicit analytical form of 1D infinite arrays. A thorough understanding thereof is fundamental both for lattice vibrations and vortex dynamics, which we demonstrate for 1D magnonic crystals. Such magnetic disk arrays with vortex-state ordering, referred to as magnetic metastructure, offer potential implementation into information processing devices.open8

    Rapidity and Centrality Dependence of Proton and Anti-proton Production from Au+Au Collisions at sqrt(sNN) = 130GeV

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    We report on the rapidity and centrality dependence of proton and anti-proton transverse mass distributions from Au+Au collisions at sqrt(sNN) = 130GeV as measured by the STAR experiment at RHIC. Our results are from the rapidity and transverse momentum range of |y|<0.5 and 0.35 <p_t<1.00GeV/c. For both protons and anti-protons, transverse mass distributions become more convex from peripheral to central collisions demonstrating characteristics of collective expansion. The measured rapidity distributions and the mean transverse momenta versus rapidity are flat within |y|<0.5. Comparisons of our data with results from model calculations indicate that in order to obtain a consistent picture of the proton(anti-proton) yields and transverse mass distributions the possibility of pre-hadronic collective expansion may have to be taken into account.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, submitted to PR
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