7,342 research outputs found

    The State Of Monetary Economics

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    The State Of Monetary Economics

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    The State of Monetary Economics

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    The State of Monetary Economics

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    Tunneling magnetoresistance in devices based on epitaxial NiMnSb with uniaxial anisotropy

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    We demonstrate tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) junctions based on a tri layer system consisting of an epitaxial NiMnSb, aluminum oxide and CoFe tri layer. The junctions show a tunnelling magnetoresistance of Delta R/R of 8.7% at room temperature which increases to 14.7% at 4.2K. The layers show clear separate switching and a small ferromagnetic coupling. A uniaxial in plane anisotropy in the NiMnSb layer leads to different switching characteristics depending on the direction in which the magnetic field is applied, an effect which can be used for sensor applications.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Appl. Phys. Let

    On the resistivity at low temperatures in electron-doped cuprate superconductors

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    We measured the magnetoresistance as a function of temperature down to 20mK and magnetic field for a set of underdoped PrCeCuO (x=0.12) thin films with controlled oxygen content. This allows us to access the edge of the superconducting dome on the underdoped side. The sheet resistance increases with increasing oxygen content whereas the superconducting transition temperature is steadily decreasing down to zero. Upon applying various magnetic fields to suppress superconductivity we found that the sheet resistance increases when the temperature is lowered. It saturates at very low temperatures. These results, along with the magnetoresistance, cannot be described in the context of zero temperature two dimensional superconductor-to-insulator transition nor as a simple Kondo effect due to scattering off spins in the copper-oxide planes. We conjecture that due to the proximity to an antiferromagnetic phase magnetic droplets are induced. This results in negative magnetoresistance and in an upturn in the resistivity.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev.

    Origin of the anomalous Hall Effect in overdoped n-type cuprates: current vertex corrections due to antiferromagnetic fluctuations

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    The anomalous magneto-transport properties in electron doped (n-type) cuprates were investigated using Hall measurements at THz frequencies. The complex Hall angle was measured in overdoped Pr2x_{\rm 2-x}Cex_{\rm x}CuO4_{\rm 4} samples (x=0.17 and 0.18) as a continuous function of temperature above TcT_c at excitation energies 5.24 and 10.5 meV. The results, extrapolated to low temperatures, show that inelastic scattering introduces electron-like contributions to the Hall response. First principle calculations of the Hall angle that include current vertex corrections (CVC) induced by electron interactions mediated by magnetic fluctuations in the Hall conductivity reproduce the temperature, frequency, and doping dependence of the experimental data. These results show that CVC effects are the source of the anomalous Hall transport properties in overdoped n-\text{-}type cuprates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Charged Rotating Black Holes in Equilibrium

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    Axially symmetric, stationary solutions of the Einstein-Maxwell equations with disconnected event horizon are studied by developing a method of explicit integration of the corresponding boundary-value problem. This problem is reduced to non-leaner system of algebraic equations which gives relations between the masses, the angular momenta, the angular velocities, the charges, the distance parameters, the values of the electromagnetic field potential at the horizon and at the symmetry axis. A found solution of this system for the case of two charged non-rotating black holes shows that in general the total mass depends on the distance between black holes. Two-Killing reduction procedure of the Einstein-Maxwell equations is also discussed.Comment: LaTeX 2.09, no figures, 15 pages, v2, references added, introduction section slightly modified; v3, grammar errors correcte
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