2,723 research outputs found
Atomic coexistence of superconductivity and incommensurate magnetic order in the Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 pnictide
75As NMR and susceptiblity were measured in a Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 single crystal
for x=6%. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectra and relaxation rates allow
to show that all Fe sites experience an incommensurate magnetic ordering below
T=31K. Comparison with undoped compound allows to estimate a typical moment of
0.05 muB. Anisotropy of the NMR widths can be interpreted using a model of
incommensurability with a wavevector (1/2-eps,0,l) with eps of the order of
0.04. Below TC=21.8K, a full volume superconductivity develops as shown by
susceptibility and relaxation rate, and magnetic order remains unaffected,
demonstrating coexistence of both states on each Fe site.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Proposed parametric cooling of bilayer cuprate superconductors by terahertz excitation
We propose and analyze a scheme for parametrically cooling bilayer cuprates
based on the selective driving of a -axis vibrational mode. The scheme
exploits the vibration as a transducer making the Josephson plasma frequencies
time-dependent. We show how modulation at the difference frequency between the
intra- and interbilayer plasmon substantially suppresses interbilayer phase
fluctuations, responsible for switching -axis transport from a
superconducting to resistive state. Our calculations indicate that this may
provide a viable mechanism for stabilizing non-equilibrium superconductivity
even above , provided a finite pair density survives between the bilayers
out of equilibrium.Comment: 4 pages + 7 page supplementa
Mn local moments prevent superconductivity in iron-pnictides Ba(Fe 1-x Mn x)2As2
75As nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments were performed on
Ba(Fe1-xMnx)2As2 (xMn = 2.5%, 5% and 12%) single crystals. The Fe layer
magnetic susceptibility far from Mn atoms is probed by the75As NMR line shift
and is found similar to that of BaFe2As2, implying that Mn does not induce
charge doping. A satellite line associated with the Mn nearest neighbours
(n.n.) of 75As displays a Curie-Weiss shift which demonstrates that Mn carries
a local magnetic moment. This is confirmed by the main line broadening typical
of a RKKY-like Mn-induced staggered spin polarization. The Mn moment is due to
the localization of the additional Mn hole. These findings explain why Mn does
not induce superconductivity in the pnictides contrary to other dopants such as
Co, Ni, Ru or K.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Absence of large nanoscale electronic inhomogeneities in the Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 pnictide
75As NMR and susceptiblity were measured in a Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 single crystal
for x=6% for various field H values and orientations. The sharpness of the
superconducting and magnetic transitions demonstrates a homogeneity of the Co
doping x better than +-0.25%. On the nanometer scale, the paramagnetic part of
the NMR spectra is found very anisotropic and very narrow for H//ab which
allows to rule out the interpretation of Ref.[6] in terms of strong Co induced
electronic inhomogeneities. We propose that a distribution of hyperfine
couplings and chemical shifts due to the Co effect on its nearest As explains
the observed linewidths and relaxations. All these measurements show that Co
substitution induces a very homogeneous electronic doping in BaFe2As2, from
nano to micrometer lengthscales, on the contrary to the K doping.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
The expansion of stripped-envelope stars:Consequences for supernovae and gravitational-wave progenitors
Massive binaries that merge as compact objects are the progenitors of
gravitational-wave sources. Most of these binaries experience one or more
phases of mass transfer, during which one of the stars loses part or all of its
outer envelope and becomes a stripped-envelope star. The evolution of the size
of these stripped stars is crucial in determining whether they experience
further interactions and their final fate. We present new calculations of
stripped-envelope stars based on binary evolution models computed with MESA. We
use these to investigate their radius evolution as a function of mass and
metallicity. We further discuss their pre-supernova observable characteristics
and potential consequences of their evolution on the properties of supernovae
from stripped stars. At high metallicity we find that practically all of the
hydrogen-rich envelope is removed, in agreement with earlier findings. Only
progenitors with initial masses below 10\Msun expand to large radii (up to
100\Rsun), while more massive progenitors stay compact. At low metallicity, a
substantial amount of hydrogen remains and the progenitors can, in principle,
expand to giant sizes (> 400\Rsun), for all masses we consider. This implies
that they can fill their Roche lobe anew. We show that the prescriptions
commonly used in population synthesis models underestimate the stellar radii by
up to two orders of magnitude. We expect that this has consequences for the
predictions for gravitational-wave sources from double neutron star mergers, in
particular for their metallicity dependence.Comment: Main text 17 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Binary-stripped Stars as Core-collapse Supernovae Progenitors
Most massive stars experience binary interactions in their lifetimes that can alter both the surface and core structure of the stripped star with significant effects on their ultimate fate as core-collapse supernovae. However, core-collapse supernovae simulations to date have focused almost exclusively on the evolution of single stars. We present a systematic simulation study of single and binary-stripped stars with the same initial mass as candidates for core-collapse supernovae (11–21 M⊙). Generally, we find that binary-stripped stars core tend to have a smaller compactness parameter, with a more prominent, deeper silicon/oxygen interface, and explode preferentially to the corresponding single stars of the same initial mass. Such a dichotomy of behavior between these two modes of evolution would have important implications for supernovae statistics, including the final neutron star masses, explosion energies, and nucleosynthetic yields. Binary-stripped remnants are also well poised to populate the possible mass gap between the heaviest neutron stars and the lightest black holes. Our work presents an improvement along two fronts, as we self-consistently account for the pre-collapse stellar evolution and the subsequent explosion outcome. Even so, our results emphasize the need for more detailed stellar evolutionary models to capture the sensitive nature of explosion outcome
Crossover from commensurate to incommensurate antiferromagnetism in stoichiometric NaFeAs revealed by single-crystal 23Na,75As-NMR experiments
We report results of 23Na and 75As nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
experiments on a self-flux grown high-quality single crystal of stoichiometric
NaFeAs. The NMR spectra revealed a tetragonal to twinned-orthorhombic
structural phase transition at T_O = 57 K and an antiferromagnetic (AF)
transition at T_AF = 45 K. The divergent behavior of nuclear relaxation rate
near T_AF shows significant anisotropy, indicating that the critical slowing
down of stripe-type AF fluctuations are strongly anisotropic in spin space. The
NMR spectra at low enough temperatures consist of sharp peaks showing a
commensurate stripe AF order with a small moment \sim 0.3 muB. However, the
spectra just below T_AF exhibits highly asymmetric broadening pointing to an
incommensurate modulation. The commensurate-incommensurate crossover in NaFeAs
shows a certain similarity to the behavior of SrFe2As2 under high pressure.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, revised version to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Visualizing the microscopic coexistence of spin density wave and superconductivity in underdoped NaFe1-xCoxAs
Although the origin of high temperature superconductivity in the iron
pnictides is still under debate, it is widely believed that magnetic
interactions or fluctuations play an important role in triggering Cooper
pairing. Because of the relevance of magnetism to pairing, the question of
whether long range spin magnetic order can coexist with superconductivity
microscopically has attracted strong interests. The available experimental
methods used to answer this question are either bulk probes or local ones
without control of probing position, thus the answers range from mutual
exclusion to homogeneous coexistence. To definitively answer this question,
here we use scanning tunneling microscopy to investigate the local electronic
structure of an underdoped NaFe1-xCoxAs near the spin density wave (SDW) and
superconducting (SC) phase boundary. Spatially resolved spectroscopy directly
reveal both the SDW and SC gap features at the same atomic location, providing
compelling evidence for the microscopic coexistence of the two phases. The
strengths of the SDW and SC features are shown to anti correlate with each
other, indicating the competition of the two orders. The microscopic
coexistence clearly indicates that Cooper pairing occurs when portions of the
Fermi surface (FS) are already gapped by the SDW order. The regime TC < T <
TSDW thus show a strong resemblance to the pseudogap phase of the cuprates
where growing experimental evidences suggest a FS reconstruction due to certain
density wave order. In this phase of the pnictides, the residual FS has a
favorable topology for magnetically mediated pairing when the ordering moment
of the SDW is small.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Wavelength dependent optical enhancement of superconducting interlayer coupling in La1.885Ba0.115CuO4
We analyze the pump wavelength dependence for the photo-induced enhancement
of interlayer coupling in La1.885Ba0.115CuO4, which is promoted by optical
melting of the stripe order. In the equilibrium superconducting state (T < Tc =
13 K), in which stripes and superconductivity coexist, time-domain THz
spectroscopy reveals a photo-induced blue-shift of the Josephson Plasma
Resonance after excitation with optical pulses polarized perpendicular to the
CuO2 planes. In the striped, non-superconducting state (Tc < T < T_SO = 40 K) a
transient plasma resonance similar to that seen below Tc appears from a
featureless equilibrium reflectivity. Most strikingly, both these effects
become stronger upon tuning of the pump wavelength from the mid-infrared to the
visible, underscoring an unconventional competition between stripe order and
superconductivity, which occurs on energy scales far above the ordering
temperature.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
- …