2,903 research outputs found
The Mid-IR Spectral Effects of Darkening Agents and Porosity on the Silicate Surface Features of Airless Bodies
We systematically measured the mid-IR spectra of different mixtures of three silicates (antigorite, lizardite, and pure silica) with varying effective porosities and amounts of darkening agent (iron oxide and carbon). These spectra have broad implications for interpretation of current and future mission data for airless bodies, as well as for testing the capabilities of new instruments. Serpentines, such as antigorite and lizardite, are common to airless surfaces, and their mid-IR spectra in the presence of darkening agents and different surface porosities would be typical for those measured by spacecraft. Silica has only been measured in the plumes of Enceladus and presents exciting possibilities for other Saturn-system surfaces due to long range transport of E-ring material. Results show that the addition of the IR-transparent salt, KBr, to simulate surface porosity affected silicate spectra in ways that were not predictable from linear mixing models. The strengthening of silicate bands with increasing pore space, even when only trace amounts of KBr were added, indicates that spectral features of porous surfaces are more detectable in the mid-IR. Combining iron oxide with the pure silicates seemed to flatten most of the silicate features, but strengthened the reststrahlen band of the silica. Incorporating carbon with the silicates weakened all silicate features, but the silica bands were more resistant to being diminished, indicating silica may be more detectable in the mid-IR than the serpentines. We show how incorporating darkening agents and porosity provides a more complete explanation of the mid-IR spectral features previously reported on worlds such as Iapetus
Complete d-Band Dispersion and the Mobile Fermion Scale in NaxCoO2
We utilize fine-tuned polarization selection coupled with excitation-energy
variation of photoelectron signal to image the \textit{complete d}-band
dispersion relation in sodium cobaltates. A hybridization gap anticrossing is
observed along the Brillouin zone corner and the full quasiparticle band is
found to emerge as a many-body entity lacking a pure orbital polarization. At
low dopings, the quasiparticle bandwidth (Fermion scale, many-body
\textit{E} 0.25 eV) is found to be smaller than most known oxide
metals. The low-lying density of states is found to be in agreement with
bulk-sensitive thermodynamic measurements for nonmagnetic dopings where the 2D
Luttinger theorem is also observed to be satisfied.Comment: 4+ pages, 5 Fig
Fatalities due to intestinal obstruction following the ingestion of foreign bodies
Two fatalities due to an occlusive ileus following the ingestion of foreign bodies in patients with psychiatric disorders are described. A severely mentally handicapped young man developed a temperature and died 1 h after admission to a surgical ward. At autopsy, not, vert, similar 2000 cm3 of foreign material, including broken glass and porcelain, branches, buttons, parts of clothing and other material were found in the gastrointestinal tract, leading to a complete obstruction of the distal intestine and colon with resulting faecal vomiting. The other case was even more unusual as a hair fetishist had swallowed a thick strand of his own hair, 50 cm long, also resulting in mechanical obstruction of the distal intestine
Low-lying quasiparticle states and hidden collective charge instabilities in parent cobaltate superconductors (NaxCoO2)
We report a state-of-the-art photoemission (ARPES) study of high quality
single crystals of the NaxCoO2 series focusing on the fine details of the
low-energy states. The Fermi velocity is found to be small (< 0.5 eV.A) and
only weakly anisotropic over the Fermi surface at all dopings setting the size
of the pair wavefunction to be on the order of 10-20 nanometers. In the low
doping regime the exchange inter-layer splitting vanishes and two dimensional
collective instabilities such as 120-type fluctuations become kinematically
allowed. Our results suggest that the unusually small Fermi velocity and the
unique symmetry of kinematic instabilities distinguish cobaltates from other
unconventional oxide superconductors such as the cuprates or the ruthenates.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. (2006
Quasiparticle coherence and the nature of the metal-insulator phase transition in NaCoO
Layered cobaltates embody novel realizations of correlated quantum matter on
a spin-1/2 triangular lattice. We report a high-resolution systematic
photoemission study of the insulating cobaltates (Na1/2CoO2 and K1/2CoO2).
Observation of single-particle gap opening and band-folding provides direct
evidence of anisotropic particle-hole instability on the Fermi surface due to
its unique topology. Kinematic overlap of the measured Fermi surface is
observed with the x cobalt charge-order Brillouin zone near
x=1/3 but not at x=1/2 where insulating transition is actually observed. Unlike
conventional density-waves, charge-stripes or band insulators, the on-set of
the gap depends on the quasiparticle's quantum coherence which is found to
occur well below the disorder-order symmetry breaking temperature of the
crystal (the first known example of its kind).Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figure
Selective interlayer ferromagnetic coupling between the Cu spins in YBa Cu O grown on top of La Ca MnO
Studies to date on ferromagnet/d-wave superconductor heterostructures focus
mainly on the effects at or near the interfaces while the response of bulk
properties to heterostructuring is overlooked. Here we use resonant soft x-ray
scattering spectroscopy to reveal a novel c-axis ferromagnetic coupling between
the in-plane Cu spins in YBa Cu O (YBCO) superconductor when it
is grown on top of ferromagnetic La Ca MnO (LCMO) manganite
layer. This coupling, present in both normal and superconducting states of
YBCO, is sensitive to the interfacial termination such that it is only observed
in bilayers with MnO_2but not with La Ca interfacial
termination. Such contrasting behaviors, we propose, are due to distinct
energetic of CuO chain and CuO plane at the La Ca and
MnO terminated interfaces respectively, therefore influencing the transfer
of spin-polarized electrons from manganite to cuprate differently. Our findings
suggest that the superconducting/ferromagnetic bilayers with proper interfacial
engineering can be good candidates for searching the theorized
Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) state in cuprates and studying the
competing quantum orders in highly correlated electron systems.Comment: Please note the change of the title. Text might be slightly different
from the published versio
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