728 research outputs found
Phase transition in the 3 Kelvin phase in the eutectic Sr2RuO4-Ru
The inhomogeneous 3-Kelvin (3K) phase of the eutectic Sr2RuO4 with Ru
inclusions nucleates superconductivity at the interface between Ru and Sr2RuO4.
The structure of the interface state and its physical properties are examined
here. Two superconducting phases are identified between the transitions to the
bulk phase at 1.5K and to the 3K phase. The nucleation of the 3K phase results
in a state conserving time reversal symmetry, which generates an intrinsically
frustrated superconducting network in samples with many Ru inclusions. At a
lower temperature (>1.5K), a discontinuous (first order) transition to an
interface state breaking time reversal symmetry is found leading to an
unfrustrated network phase. It is shown that this phase transition located at a
temperature between 1.5 and 3K would yield the anomalous property that the
critical current in such a network depends on the sign of the current,
reproducing recent experimental observations.Comment: This paper has been withdrawn by the authors. 5 pages, 6 figure
Zonal Ultracentrifugation of β-Lactoglobulin and κ-Casein Complexes Induced by Heat
Abstract A zonal ultracentrifuge was used to isolate the heat-induced complexes of β -lactoglobulin and κ -casein. The complexes formed at 80C in sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 6.65, ionic strength 0.08, varied in size and composition, but moved as a single band in starch-gel electrophoresis. The maximum ratio in the complex was estimated to be 3 β -lactoglobulin:1 κ -casein. When a 1:1 mixture was heated at 110C the major component banded in 6.9% sucrose, had a sedimentation coefficient of 2.35, and moved as a single band in starch gel. At 140C, κ -casein was degraded extensively, and no complex could be detected. The complex formed at 90C from a 1:1 mixture in a synthetic serum containing calcium had a sedimentation coefficient of 39. For other mixtures in the presence of calcium the unreacted proteins could not be quantitatively separated from the complex. Zonal ultracentrifugation of heated skimmilk and colloidal calcium phosphate free milk failed to show a discrete complex peak
Symmetry of boundary conditions of the Dirac equation for electrons in carbon nanotubes.
We consider the effective mass model of spinless electrons in single wall carbon nanotubes that is equivalent to the Dirac equation for massless fermions. Within this framework we derive all possible energy independent hard wall boundary conditions that are applicable to metallic tubes. The boundary conditions are classified in terms of their symmetry properties and we demonstrate that the use of different boundary conditions will result in varying degrees of valley degeneracy breaking of the single particle energy spectrum
Spectroscopy of SrRuO/Ru Junctions in Eutectic
We have investigated the tunnelling properties of the interface between
superconducting Sr2RuO4 and a single Ru inclusion in eutectic. By using a
micro-fabrication technique, we have made Sr2RuO4/Ru junctions on the eutectic
system that consists of Sr2RuO4 and Ru micro-inclusions. Such a eutectic system
exhibits surface superconductivity, called the 3-K phase. A zero bias
conductance peak (ZBCP) was observed in the 3-K phase. We propose to use the
onset of the ZBCP to delineate the phase boundary of a time-reversal symmetry
breaking state.Comment: To be published in Proc of 24th Int. Conf. on Low Temperature Physics
(LT24); 2 page
The impact of HTLV-1 on the cellular genome.
Human T-lymphotropic virus type-1 (HTLV-1) is the causative agent of adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATL), an aggressive CD4+ T-cell malignancy. The mechanisms of leukaemogenesis in ATL are incompletely understood. Insertional mutagenesis has not previously been thought to contribute to the pathogenesis of ATL. However, the recent discovery that HTLV-1 binds the key chromatin architectural protein CTCF raises the hypothesis that HTLV-1 deregulates host gene expression by causing abnormal chromatin looping, bringing the strong HTLV-1 promoter-enhancer near to host genes that lie up to 2Mb from the integrated provirus. Here we review current opinion on the mechanisms of oncogenesis in ATL, with particular emphasis on the local and distant impact of HTLV-1 on the structure and expression of the host genome
Tunneling of correlated electrons in ultra high magnetic field
Effects of the electron-electron interaction on tunneling into a metal in
ultra-high magnetic field (ultra-quantum limit) are studied. The range of the
interaction is found to have a decisive effect both on the nature of the
field-induced instability of the ground state and on the properties of the
system at energies above the corresponding gap. For a short-range repulsive
interaction, tunneling is dominated by the renormalization of the coupling
constant, which leads eventually to the charge-density wave instability. For a
long-range interaction, there exists an intermediate energy range in which the
conductance obeys a power-law scaling form, similar to that of a 1D Luttinger
liquid. The exponent is magnetic-field dependent, and more surprisingly, may be
positive or negative, i. e., interactions may either suppress or enhance the
tunneling conductance compared to its non-interacting value. At energies near
the gap, scaling breaks down and tunneling is again dominated by the
instability, which in this case is an (anisotropic) Wigner crystal instability.Comment: 4 pages, 2 .eps figure
Tunneling properties at the interface between superconducting Sr2RuO4 and a Ru micro-inclusion
We have investigated the magnetic field and temperature dependence of the
tunneling spectra of the eutectic system Sr2RuO4-Ru. Electric contacts to
individual Ru lamellae embedded in Sr2RuO4 enable the tunneling spectra at the
interface between ruthenate and a Ru microinclusion to be measured. A zero bias
conductance peak (ZBCP) was observed in the bias voltage dependence of the
differential conductance, suggesting that Andreev bound states are present at
the interface. The ZBCP starts to appear at a temperature well below the
superconducting transition temperature. The onset magnetic field of the ZBCP is
also considerably smaller than the upper critical field when the magnetic field
is parallel to the ab-plane. We propose that the difference between the onset
of the ZBCP and the onset of superconductivity can be understood in terms of
the existence of the single-component state predicted by Sigrist and Monien.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. vol. 74 no.
Multiple superconducting transitions in the Sr3Ru2O7 region of Sr3Ru2O7-Sr2RuO4 eutectic crystals
We report superconducting properties of Sr3Ru2O7-Sr2RuO4 eutectic crystals,
consisting of the spin-triplet superconductor Sr2RuO4 with a monolayer stacking
of RuO2 planes and the metamagnetic normal metal Sr3Ru2O7 with a bilayer
stacking. Although Sr3Ru2O7 has not been reported to exhibit superconductivity
so far, our AC susceptibility measurements revealed multiple superconducting
transitions occurring in the Sr3Ru2O7 region of the eutectic crystals. The
diamagnetic shielding essentially reached the full fraction at low AC fields
parallel to the c axis. However, both the shielding fraction and the onset
temperature are easily suppressed by AC fields of larger than 0.1 mT-rms and no
anomaly was observed in the specific heat. Moreover, the critical field curves
of these transitions have a positive curvature near zero fields, which is
different from the upper critical field curve of the bulk Sr2RuO4. These facts
suggest that the superconductivity observed in the Sr3Ru2O7 region is not a
bulk property. To explain these experimental results, we propose the scenario
that stacking RuO2 planes, the building block of superconducting Sr2RuO4, are
contained in the Sr3Ru2O7 region as stacking faults.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Charge Screening Effect in Metallic Carbon Nanotubes
Charge screening effect in metallic carbon nanotubes is investigated in a
model including the one-dimensional long-range Coulomb interaction. It is
pointed out that an external charge which is being fixed spatially is screened
by internal electrons so that the resulting object becomes electrically
neutral. We found that the screening length is given by about the diameter of a
nanotube.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Influence of off-cut angle of (0001) 4H-SiC on the crystal quality of InN grown by RF-MBE
AbstractThe effect of the off-cut angle of a 4H-SiC (0001) substrate on the growth of InN thick layer by RF-plasma assisted molecular beam epitaxy (RF-MBE) has been investigated. The off-cut angle used in this study was inclined from 0° (just surface) toward the [11–20] direction of 4° and 8°. Crystalline quality and surface morphology were remarkably sensitive to the value of off-angle. Higher off-cut angles result in a reduction of the full-widths at half-maximum of HRXRD (0002) ω-scans, compared to that of the layer on the (0001)-just surface. In addition, the full-widths at halfmaximum of μ-Raman scattering spectra at 490cm-1, which is attributed to E2 (high) phonon mode, was decreased with increase in off-cut angle. Furthermore, In-droplets, which are commonly observed on the (0001) InN grown surface under In rich-growth condition, were found to be suppressed owing to an improvement of a nucleation on the off-cut angle surface. In our case, the use of 8°-off substrate increased film density and growth rate, while a surface roughness was reduced. These results clearly demonstrate that the larger off-cut angles improve the crystalline quality of InN film with reducing the In-droplets due to a higher step surface density on the off-cut angle surface
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