349 research outputs found

    A fast-neutron spectrometer of advanced design

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    Fast neutron spectrometer combines helium filled proportional counters with solid-state detectors to achieve the properties of high efficiency, good resolution, rapid response, and effective gamma ray rejection

    Multilayered printed circuit boards inspected by X-ray laminography

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    Technique produces high resolution cross-sectional radiographs with close interplane spacing for inspecting multilayer boards to be used in providing circuitry routing and module structural support

    Evidence for field-induced excitations in low-temperature thermal conductivity of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8

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    The thermal conductivity ,κ\kappa, of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8 was studied as a function of magnetic field. Above 5 K, after an initial decrease, κ(H)\kappa(H) presents a kink followed by a plateau, as recently reported by Krishana et al.. By contrast, below 1K, the thermal conductivity was found to \emph{increase} with increasing field. This behavior is indicative of a finite density of states and is not compatible with the existence of a field-induced fully gapped dx2y2+idxyd_{x^{2}-y^{2}}+id_{xy} state which was recently proposed to describe the plateau regime. Our low-temperature results are in agreement with recent works predicting a field-induced enhancement of thermal conductivity by Doppler shift of quasi-particle spectrum.Comment: 4 pages including 4 eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Anisotropic thermodynamics of d-wave superconductors in the vortex state

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    We show that the density of states and the thermodynamic properties of a 2D d-wave superconductor in the vortex state with applied magnetic field H\bf H in the plane depend on the angle between H\bf H and the order parameter nodes. Within a semiclassical treatment of the extended quasiparticle states, we obtain fourfold oscillations of the specific heat, measurement of which provides a simple probe of gap symmetry. The frequency dependence of the density of states and the temperature dependence of thermodynamic properties obey different power laws for field in the nodal and anti-nodal direction. The fourfold pattern is changed to twofold when orthorhombicity is considered.Comment: 5 pages, figures included, minor changes, published versio

    Calculation of the effect of random superfluid density on the temperature dependence of the penetration depth

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    Microscopic variations in composition or structure can lead to nanoscale inhomogeneity in superconducting properties such as the magnetic penetration depth, but measurements of these properties are usually made on longer length scales. We solve a generalized London equation with a non-uniform penetration depth, lambda(r), obtaining an approximate solution for the disorder-averaged Meissner effect. We find that the effective penetration depth is different from the average penetration depth and is sensitive to the details of the disorder. These results indicate the need for caution when interpreting measurements of the penetration depth and its temperature dependence in systems which may be inhomogeneous

    Transport Properties of d-Wave Superconductors in the Vortex State

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    We calculate the magnetic field dependence of quasiparticle transport properties in the vortex state of a d-wave superconductor arising solely from the quasiparticle's Doppler shift in the superflow field surrounding the vortex. Qualitative features agree well with experiments on cuprate and heavy fermion superconductors at low fields and temperatures. We derive scaling relations in the variable T/H1/2T/H^{1/2} valid at sufficiently low temperatures TT and fields HH, but show that these relations depend on the scattering phase shift, and are in general fulfilled only approximately even in the clean limit, due to the energy dependence of the quasiparticle relaxation time.Comment: 5 pages, 2 Postscript figure

    Higher order eigenpair perturbations

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/76914/1/AIAA-11149-583.pd

    Angle Dependence of the Transverse Thermal Conductivity in YBa2_2Cu3_3O7_7 single crystals: Doppler Effect vs. Andreev scattering

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    We have measured the transverse thermal conductivity κxy\kappa_{xy} of twinned and untwinned YBa2_2Cu3_3O7_7 single crystals as a function of angle θ\theta between the magnetic field applied parallel to the CuO2_2 planes and the heat current direction, at different magnetic fields and temperatures. For both crystals we observed a clear twofold variation in the field-angle dependence of κxy(θ)=κxy0(T,B)sin(2θ)\kappa_{xy}(\theta) = - \kappa^0_{xy}(T,B) \sin(2\theta). We have found that the oscillation amplitude κxy0\kappa^0_{xy} depends on temperature and magnetic field. Our results show that κxy0=aBln(1/(bB))\kappa^0_{xy} = a B \ln(1/(bB)) with the temperature- and sample-dependent parameters aa and bb. We discuss our results in terms of Andreev scattering of quasiparticles by vortices and a recently proposed theory based on the Doppler shift in the quasiparticle spectrum.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Combined Paramagnetic and Diamagnetic Response of YBCO

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    It has been predicted that the zero frequency density of states of YBCO in the superconducting phase can display interesting anisotropy effects when a magnetic field is applied parallel to the copper-oxide planes, due to the diamagnetic response of the quasi-particles. In this paper we incorporate paramagnetism into the theory and show that it lessens the anisotropy and can even eliminate it altogether. At the same time paramagnetism also changes the scaling with the square root of the magnetic field first deduced by Volovik leading to an experimentally testable prediction. We also map out the analytic structure of the zero frequency density of states as a function of the diamagnetic and paramagnetic energies. At certain critical magnetic field values we predict kinks as we vary the magnetic field. However these probably lie beyond currently accessible field strengths
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