6,918 research outputs found

    Crossover from a pseudogap state to a superconducting state

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    On the basis of our calculation we deduce that the particular electronic structure of cuprate superconductors confines Cooper pairs to be firstly formed in the antinodal region which is far from the Fermi surface, and these pairs are incoherent and result in the pseudogap state. With the change of doping or temperature, some pairs are formed in the nodal region which locates the Fermi surface, and these pairs are coherent and lead to superconductivity. Thus the coexistence of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap is explained when the two kinds of gaps are not all on the Fermi surface. It is also shown that the symmetry of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap are determined by the electronic structure, and non-s wave symmetry gap favors the high-temperature superconductivity. Why the high-temperature superconductivity occurs in the metal region near the Mott metal-insulator transition is also explained.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure

    Quantifying the Effect of Non-Larmor Motion of Electrons on the Pressure Tensor

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    In space plasma, various effects of magnetic reconnection and turbulence cause the electron motion to significantly deviate from their Larmor orbits. Collectively these orbits affect the electron velocity distribution function and lead to the appearance of the "non-gyrotropic" elements in the pressure tensor. Quantification of this effect has important applications in space and laboratory plasma, one of which is tracing the electron diffusion region (EDR) of magnetic reconnection in space observations. Three different measures of agyrotropy of pressure tensor have previously been proposed, namely, AeA\varnothing_e, DngD_{ng} and QQ. The multitude of contradictory measures has caused confusion within the community. We revisit the problem by considering the basic properties an agyrotropy measure should have. We show that AeA\varnothing_e, DngD_{ng} and QQ are all defined based on the sum of the principle minors (i.e. the rotation invariant I2I_2) of the pressure tensor. We discuss in detail the problems of I2I_2-based measures and explain why they may produce ambiguous and biased results. We introduce a new measure AGAG constructed based on the determinant of the pressure tensor (i.e. the rotation invariant I3I_3) which does not suffer from the problems of I2I_2-based measures. We compare AGAG with other measures in 2 and 3-dimension particle-in-cell magnetic reconnection simulations, and show that AGAG can effectively trace the EDR of reconnection in both Harris and force-free current sheets. On the other hand, AeA\varnothing_e does not show prominent peaks in the EDR and part of the separatrix in the force-free reconnection simulations, demonstrating that AeA\varnothing_e does not measure all the non-gyrotropic effects in this case, and is not suitable for studying magnetic reconnection in more general situations other than Harris sheet reconnection.Comment: accepted by Phys. of Plasm

    Thermally stable low current consuming gallium and germanium chalcogenides for consumer and automotive memory applications

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    The phase change technology behind rewritable optical disks and the latest generation of electronic memories has provided clear commercial and technological advances for the field of data storage, by virtue of the many well known attributes, in particular scaling, cycling endurance and speed, that chalcogenide materials offer. While the switching power and current consumption of established germanium antimony telluride based memory cells are a major factor in chip design in real world applications, often the thermal stability of the device can be a major obstacle in the path to the full commercialisation. In this work we describe our research in material discovery and characterization for the purpose of identifying more thermally stable chalcogenides for applications in PCRAM
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