31,819 research outputs found

    High-Pressure Induced Structural Phase Transition in CaCrO4: Evidence from Raman Scattering Studies

    Full text link
    Raman spectroscopic studies have been carried out on CaCrO4 under pressure up to 26GPa at ambient temperature. The Raman spectra showed CaCrO4 experienced a continuous structural phase transition started at near 6GPa, and finished at about 10GPa. It is found that the high-pressure phase could be quenched to ambient conditions. Pressure dependence of the Raman peaks suggested there existed four pressure regions related to different structural characters. We discussed these characters and inferred that the nonreversible structural transition in CaCrO4, most likely was from a zircon-type (I41/amd) ambient phase to a scheelite-type high pressure structure (I41/a).Comment: submitte

    Measurement of nuclear effects in neutrino interactions with minimal dependence on neutrino energy

    Get PDF
    We present a phenomenological study of nuclear effects in neutrino charged-current interactions, using transverse kinematic imbalances in exclusive measurements. Novel observables with minimal dependence on neutrino energy are proposed to study quasielastic scattering, and especially resonance production. They should be able to provide direct constraints on nuclear effects in neutrino- and antineutrino-nucleus interactions.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, accepted version by PR

    Upper limits on stray force noise for LISA

    Full text link
    We have developed a torsion pendulum facility for LISA gravitational reference sensor ground testing that allows us to put significant upper limits on residual stray forces exerted by LISA-like position sensors on a representative test mass and to characterize specific sources of disturbances for LISA. We present here the details of the facility, the experimental procedures used to maximize its sensitivity, and the techniques used to characterize the pendulum itself that allowed us to reach a torque sensitivity below 20 fNm /sqrt{Hz} from 0.3 to 10 mHz. We also discuss the implications of the obtained results for LISA.Comment: To be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, special issue on Amaldi5 2003 conference proceedings (10 pages, 6 figures

    Strength of Correlations in electron and hole doped cuprates

    Full text link
    High temperature superconductivity was achieved by introducing holes in a parent compound consisting of copper oxide layers separated by spacer layers. It is possible to dope some of the parent compounds with electrons, and their physical properties are bearing some similarities but also significant differences from the hole doped counterparts. Here, we use a recently developed first principles method, to study the electron doped cuprates and elucidate the deep physical reasons why their behavior is so different than the hole doped materials. We find that electron doped compounds are Slater insulators, e.g. a material where the insulating behavior is the result of the presence of magnetic long range order. This is in sharp contrast with the hole doped materials, where the parent compound is a Mott charge transfer insulator, namely a material which is insulating due to the strong electronic correlations but not due to the magnetic order.Comment: submitted to Nature Physic

    Interpolation between Airy and Poisson statistics for unitary chiral non-Hermitian random matrix ensembles

    Get PDF
    We consider a family of chiral non-Hermitian Gaussian random matrices in the unitarily invariant symmetry class. The eigenvalue distribution in this model is expressed in terms of Laguerre polynomials in the complex plane. These are orthogonal with respect to a non-Gaussian weight including a modified Bessel function of the second kind, and we give an elementary proof for this. In the large n limit, the eigenvalue statistics at the spectral edge close to the real axis are described by the same family of kernels interpolating between Airy and Poisson that was recently found by one of the authors for the elliptic Ginibre ensemble. We conclude that this scaling limit is universal, appearing for two different non-Hermitian random matrix ensembles with unitary symmetry. As a second result we give an equivalent form for the interpolating Airy kernel in terms of a single real integral, similar to representations for the asymptotic kernel in the bulk and at the hard edge of the spectrum. This makes its structure as a one-parameter deformation of the Airy kernel more transparent

    On the Transport Properties of a Quark-Hadron Coulomb Lattice in the Cores of Neutron Stars

    Full text link
    Already more that 40 years ago, it has been suggested that because of the enormous mass densities in the cores of neutron stars, the hadrons in the centers of neutron stars may undergo a phase transition to deconfined quark matter. In this picture, neutron stars could contain cores made of pure (up, down, strange) quark matter which are surrounded by a mixed phase of quarks and hadrons. More than that, because of the competition between the Coulomb and the surface energies associated with the positively charged regions of nuclear matter and negatively charged regions of quark matter, the mixed phase may develop geometrical structures, similarly to what is expected of the sub-nuclear liquid-gas phase transition. In this paper we restrict ourselves to considering the formation of rare phase blobs in the mixed quark-hadron phase. The influence of rare phase blobs on the thermal and transport properties of neutron star matter is investigated. The total specific heat, cVc_V, thermal conductivity, κ\kappa, and electron-blob Bremsstrahlung neutrino emissivities, ϵν,BR\epsilon_{\nu,\text{BR}}, of quark-hybrid matter are computed and the results are compared with the associated thermal and transport properties of standard neutron star matter. Our results show that the contribution of rare phase blobs to the specific heat is negligibly small. This is different for the neutrino emissivity from electron-blob Bremsstrahlung scattering, which turns out to be of the same order of magnitude as the total contributions from other Bremsstrahlung processes for temperatures below about 10810^8 K.Comment: minor changes, accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Femtosecond laser processing of nitride-based thin films to improve their tribological performance

    Get PDF
    The ability of femtosecond laser pulses to pattern coated tribological surfaces in order to improve their wear behavior was investigated. Experiments were performed with a Ti:sapphire laser (wavelength: 800nm, energy density: 2J/cm2, pulse duration: 100fs) on TiN- and on TiCN-coated surfaces. Morphological analyses of the laser-treated surfaces were carried out and did not reveal any film delamination or other coating damage after laser processing. Tribological tests simulating rapidly increasing contact pressures under boundary friction were performed on both unpatterned and laser-patterned coated surfaces using a steel counter body. The patterned surfaces showed significantly better tribological performance with respect to stability and the value of the friction coefficient during testing. EDX analyses of the tested unpatterned samples revealed complete coating removal and material transfer from the counter body to the sample surface. In the case of the laser-patterned surfaces, only slight coating damage and an accumulation of debris from the steel counter body in the laser-induced pores were observe
    corecore