880 research outputs found

    Magnetically asymmetric interfaces in a (LaMnO3_3)/(SrMnO3_3) superlattice due to structural asymmetries

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    Polarized neutron reflectivity measurements of a ferromagnetic [(LaMnO3_3)11.8_{11.8}/(SrMnO3_3)4.4_{4.4}]6_6 superlattice reveal a modulated magnetic structure with an enhanced magnetization at the interfaces where LaMnO3_3 was deposited on SrMnO3_3 (LMO/SMO). However, the opposite interfaces (SMO/LMO) are found to have a reduced ferromagnetic moment. The magnetic asymmetry arises from the difference in lateral structural roughness of the two interfaces observed via electron microscopy, with strong ferromagnetism present at the interfaces that are atomically smooth over tens of nanometers. This result demonstrates that atomic-scale roughness can destabilize interfacial phases in complex oxide heterostructures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Unanticipated proximity behavior in ferromagnet-superconductor heterostructures with controlled magnetic noncollinearity

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    Magnetization noncollinearity in ferromagnet-superconductor (F/S) heterostructures is expected to enhance the superconducting transition temperature (Tc) according to the domain-wall superconductivity theory, or to suppress Tc when spin-triplet Cooper pairs are explicitly considered. We study the proximity effect in F/S structures where the F layer is a Sm-Co/Py exchange-spring bilayer and the S layer is Nb. The exchange-spring contains a single, controllable and quantifiable domain wall in the Py layer. We observe an enhancement of superconductivity that is nonmonotonic as the Py domain wall is increasingly twisted via rotating a magnetic field, different from theoretical predictions. We have excluded magnetic fields and vortex motion as the source of the nonmonotonic behavior. This unanticipated proximity behavior suggests that new physics is yet to be captured in the theoretical treatments of F/S systems containing noncollinear magnetization.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures. Physical Review Letters in pres

    Common and unique features of viral RNA-dependent polymerases.

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    Eukaryotes and bacteria can be infected with a wide variety of RNA viruses. On average, these pathogens share little sequence similarity and use different replication and transcription strategies. Nevertheless, the members of nearly all RNA virus families depend on the activity of a virally encoded RNA-dependent polymerase for the condensation of nucleotide triphosphates. This review provides an overview of our current understanding of the viral RNA-dependent polymerase structure and the biochemistry and biophysics that is involved in replicating and transcribing the genetic material of RNA viruses

    Magnetic Structure in Fe/Sm-Co Exchange Spring Bilayers with Intermixed Interfaces

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    The depth profile of the intrinsic magnetic properties in an Fe/Sm-Co bilayer fabricated under nearly optimal spring-magnet conditions was determined by complementary studies of polarized neutron reflectometry and micromagnetic simulations. We found that at the Fe/Sm-Co interface the magnetic properties change gradually at the length scale of 8 nm. In this intermixed interfacial region, the saturation magnetization and magnetic anisotropy are lower and the exchange stiffness is higher than values estimated from the model based on a mixture of Fe and Sm-Co phases. Therefore, the intermixed interface yields superior exchange coupling between the Fe and Sm-Co layers, but at the cost of average magnetization.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures and 1 tabl

    Reorientation in Antiferromagnetic Multilayers: Spin-Flop Transition and Surface Effects

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    Nanoscale superlattices with uniaxial ferromagnetic layers antiferromagnetically coupled through non-magnetic spacers are recently used as components of magnetoresistive and recording devices. In the last years intensive experimental investigations of these artificial antiferromagnets have revealed a large variety of surface induced reorientational effects and other remarkable phenomena unknown in other magnetic materials. In this paper we review and generalize theoretical results, which enable a consistent description of the complex magnetization processes in antiferromagnetic multilayers, and we explain the responsible physical mechanism. The general structure of phase diagrams for magnetic states in these systems is discussed. In particular, our results resolve the long standing problem of a ``surface spin-flop'' in antiferromagnetic layers. This explains the different appearance of field-driven reorientation transitions in systems like Fe/Cr (001) and (211) superlattices, and in [CoPt]/Ru multilayers with strong perpendicular anisotropy.Comment: Companion paper for talk at Second Seeheim Conference on Magnetism, June 27- July 1, 2004; 8 pages included 7 figure

    Surface spin-flop transition in a uniaxial antiferromagnetic Fe/Cr superlattice induced by a magnetic field of arbitrary direction

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    We studied the transition between the antiferromagnetic and the surface spin-flop phases of a uniaxial antiferromagnetic [Fe(14 \AA)/Cr(11 \AA]x20_{\rm x20} superlattice. For external fields applied parallel to the in-plane easy axis, the layer-by-layer configuration, calculated in the framework of a mean-field one-dimensional model, was benchmarked against published polarized neutron reflectivity data. For an in-plane field HH applied at an angle ψ0\psi \ne 0 with the easy axis, magnetometry shows that the magnetization MM vanishes at H=0, then increases slowly with increasing HH. At a critical value of HH, a finite jump in M(H)M(H) is observed for ψ<5o\psi<5^{\rm o}, while a smooth increase of MM vsvs HH is found for ψ>5o\psi>5^{\rm o}. A dramatic increase in the full width at half maximum of the magnetic susceptibility is observed for ψ5o\psi \ge 5^{\rm o}. The phase diagram obtained from micromagnetic calculations displays a first-order transition to a surface spin-flop phase for low ψ\psi values, while the transition becomes continuous for ψ\psi greater than a critical angle, ψmax4.75o\psi_{\rm max} \approx 4.75^{\rm o}. This is in fair agreement with the experimentally observed results.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figure
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