14,693 research outputs found

    Interplay between different states in heavy fermion physics

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    Calorimetry experiments under high pressure were used to clarify the interplay between different states such as superconductivity and antiferromagnetism in CeRhIn5, spin density wave and large moment antiferromagnetism in URu2Si2. Evidences are given on the re-entrance of antiferromagnetism under magnetic field in the superconducting phase of CeRhIn5 up to pc = 2.5 GPa where the Neel temperature will collapse in the absence of superconductivity. For URu2Si2 measurements up to 10 GPa support strongly the coexistence of spin density wave and large moment antiferromagnetism at high pressures.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, presented at ICM200

    Manifestation of spin degrees of freedom in the double fractional quantum Hall system

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    The double fractional quantum Hall system of spin 1/2 electrons is numerically studied to predict that there exists a novel spin-unpolarized quantum liquid specific to the multi-species system, which exemplifies a link between the spin state and the inter-layer electron correlation. Even when the ground state is spin-polarized, the lowest charge-excitation mode involves the spin when the interlayer tunneling is considered.Comment: typeset in LATEX, 2 figures available upon request at [email protected], 9 pages, NA-94-0

    Spin-squeezed Ground States in the Bilayer Quantum Hall Ferromagnet

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    A "squeezed-vacuum" state considered in quantum optics is shown to be realized in the ground-state wavefunction for the bilayer quantum Hall system at the total Landau level filling of ν=1/m\nu=1/m (m: odd integer). This is derived in the boson approximation, where a particle-hole pair creation across the symmetric-antisymmetric gap, ΔSAS\Delta_{SAS}, is regarded as a boson. In terms of the pseudospin describing the layers, the state is a spin-squeezed state, where the degree of squeezing is controlled by the layer separation and ΔSAS\Delta_{SAS}. An exciton condensation, which amounts to a rotated spin-squeezed state, has a higher energy due to the degraded SU(2) symmetry for ΔSAS0\Delta_{SAS} \neq 0.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, one figure, to appear in PRB Rapid Communicatio

    Superconductivity at T_c ~ 14 K in Single Crystalline FeTe0.61_{0.61}Se0.39_{0.39}

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    Single crystalline FeTe0.61_{0.61}Se0.39_{0.39} with a sharp superconducting transition at TcT_{\textrm{c}} \sim 14 K is synthesized via slow furnace cooling followed by low-temperature annealing. The effect of annealing on the chemical and superconducting inhomogeneities is carefully characterized. We also report resistivity, magnetization, and magneto-optical images of this crystal. Based on the Bean model, critical current density is estimated to exceed 1×1051 \times 10^5 A/cm2^2 below 5 K under zero field. Weak fish-tail effect is identified at lower temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Very Fast Chip-level Thermal Analysis

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    We present a new technique of VLSI chip-level thermal analysis. We extend a newly developed method of solving two dimensional Laplace equations to thermal analysis of four adjacent materials on a mother board. We implement our technique in C and compare its performance to that of a commercial CAD tool. Our experimental results show that our program runs 5.8 and 8.9 times faster while keeping smaller residuals by 5 and 1 order of magnitude, respectively.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions (http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions

    Thermodynamic Construction of an One-Step Replica-Symmetry-Breaking Solution in Finite Connectivity Spin Glasses

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    An one-step replica-symmetry-breaking solution for finite connectivity spin-glass models with K body interaction is constructed at finite temperature using the replica method and thermodynamic constraints. In the absence of external fields, this construction provides a general extension of replica symmetric solution at finite replica number to one-step replica-symmetry-breaking solution. It is found that this result is formally equivalent to that of the one-step replica-symmetry-breaking cavity method. To confirm the validity of the obtained solution, Monte Carlo simulations are performed for K = 2 and 3. The thermodynamic quantities of the Monte Carlo results extrapolated to a large-size limit are consistent with those estimated by our solution for K = 2 at all simulated temperatures and for K = 3 except near the transition temperature.Comment: 11pages, 19 figures. Added content and references. Accepted to Phys. Rev.

    A-site Randomness Effect on Structural and Physical Properties of Ba-based Perovskite Manganites

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    The discovery of novel structural and physical properties in the AA-site ordered manganite RRBaMn2_{2}O6_{6} (RR = Y and rare earth elements) has demanded new comprehension about perovskite manganese oxides. In the present study, the AA-site disordered form, R0.5R_{0.5}Ba0.5_{0.5}MnO3_{3}, has been investigated and compared with both RRBaMn2_{2}O6_{6} and R0.5A0.5R_{0.5}A_{0.5}MnO3_{3} (AA: Sr, Ca) in the structures and electromagnetic properties. R0.5R_{0.5}Ba0.5_{0.5}MnO3_{3} has a primitive cubic perovskite cell in the structure and magnetic glassy states are dominant as its ground state, in contrast to the ordinary disordered R0.5A0.5R_{0.5}A_{0.5}MnO3_{3} (AA: Sr, Ca). In Pr-compounds with various degrees of Pr/Ba randomness at the AA-sites, the AA-site disorder gradually suppresses both ferromagnetic and A-type antiferromagnetic transitions and finally leads to a magnetic glassy state in Pr0.5_{0.5}Ba0.5_{0.5}MnO3_{3}. A peculiar behavior, multi-step magnetization and resistivity change, has been observed in Pr0.5_{0.5}Ba0.5_{0.5}MnO3_{3}. These properties could be closely related to any spatial heterogeneity caused by the random distribution of Ba2+^{2 +} and R3+R^{3 +} with much different ionic radius.Comment: 9 pages, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 73 Aug. (2004

    Coexistence of ferromagnetism and superconductivity near quantum phase transition: The Heisenberg- to Ising-type crossover

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    A microscopic mean-field theory of the phase coexistence between ferromagnetism and superconductivity in the weakly ferromagnetic itinerant electron system is constructed, while incorporating a realistic mechanism for superconducting pairing due to the exchange of critical spin fluctuations. The self-consistent solution of the resulting equations determines the superconducting transition temperature which is shown to depend strongly on the exchange splitting. The effect of phase crossover from isotropic (Heisenberg-like) to uniaxial (Ising-like) spin fluctuations near the quantum phase transition is analysed and the generic phase diagram is obtained. This scenario is then applied to the case of itinerant ferromagnet ZrZn2, which sheds light on the proposed phase diagram of this compound. Possible explanation of superconductivity in UGe2 is also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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