7,097 research outputs found

    Determination of the resistivity anisotropy of SrRuO3_{3} by measuring the planar Hall effect

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    We have measured the planar Hall effect in epitaxial thin films of the itinerant ferromagnet SrRuO3 patterned with their current paths at different angles relative to the crystallographic axes. Based on the results, we have determined that SrRuO3 exhibits small resistivity anisotropy in the entire temperature range of our measurements (between 2 to 300 K); namely, both above and below its Curie temperature (~150 K). It means that in addition to anisotropy related to magnetism, the resistivity anisotropy of SrRuO3 has an intrinsic, nonmagnetic source. We have found that the two sources of anisotropy have competing effects

    Detection and imaging of the oxygen deficiency in single crystalline YBa2_{\text{2}}Cu3_{\text{3}}O7δ_{\text{7}-\delta} thin films using a positron beam

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    Single crystalline YBa2_{\text{2}}Cu3_{\text{3}}O7δ_{\text{7}-\delta} (YBCO) thin films were grown by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) in order to probe the oxygen deficiency δ\delta using a mono-energetic positron beam. The sample set covered a large range of δ\delta (0.191<δ\delta<0.791) yielding a variation of the critical temperature TcT_{\text{c}} between 25 and 90\,K. We found a linear correlation between the Doppler broadening of the positron electron annihilation line and δ\delta determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD). Both, the origin of the found correlation and the influence of metallic vacancies, were examined with the aid of ab-initio calculations that allowed us (i) to exclude the presence of Y vacancies and (ii) to ensure that positrons still probe δ\delta despite the potential presence of Ba or Cu vacancies. In addition, by scanning with the positron beam the spatial variation of δ\delta could be analyzed. It was found to fluctuate with a standard deviation of up to 0.079(5)0.079(5) within a single YBCO film

    Constructions for cyclic sieving phenomena

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    We show how to derive new instances of the cyclic sieving phenomenon from old ones via elementary representation theory. Examples are given involving objects such as words, parking functions, finite fields, and graphs.Comment: 18 pages, typos fixed, to appear in SIAM J. Discrete Mat

    Program for sea level test firing of rocket engines final report, 1 sep. 1964 - 1 feb. 1965

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    Bipropellant rocket engines with radiation cooled thrust combustion chambers of molybdenum fired for testing and material evaluatio

    Uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy in CaRuO3{\rm CaRuO_3}

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    CaRuO3{\rm CaRuO_3} is a paramagnetic metal and since its low temperature resistivity is described by ρ=ρ0+ATγ\rho=\rho_0+AT^\gamma with γ1.5\gamma \sim 1.5, it is also considered a non-Fermi liquid (NFL) metal. We have performed extensive magnetoresistance and Hall effect measurements of untwinned epitaxial films of CaRuO3{\rm CaRuO_3}. These measurements reveal that CaRuO3{\rm CaRuO_3} exhibits uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy. In addition, the low-temperature NFL behavior is most effectively suppressed when a magnetic field is applied along the easy axis, suggesting that critical spin fluctuations, possibly due to proximity of a quantum critical phase transition, are related to the NFL behavior.Comment: 7 figure

    An immunohistochemical study of the telencephalon of the african lungfish, Protopterus annectens

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    The telencephalon of the African lungflsh, Protopterus annectens , was studied by immunohistochemical techniques in order to identify the major subdivisions of the telencephalon and determine the possible homologues of these subdivisions, if any, in other vertebrates. The distributions of four different neuropeptides (substance P, leucine-enkephalin, avian pancreatic polypeptide, and LANT6), a neurotransmitter (serotonin), and a neurotransmitter-related enzyme that is involved in catecholamine synthesis (tyrosine hydroxylase) were examined. The resultant labeling patterns indicated that the telencephalon of lungfish consists of three major subdivisions–a rostrally and dorsally situated olfactory bulb, a dorsally situated pallial region located caudal to the olfactory bulbs, and a ventrally situated subpallial regions. The dorsal and lateral pallial regions, which both receive secondary olfactory input, are somewhat, distinct from one another cytoarchitectonically, but their immunohistochemical, labeling characteristics did not differ. Thus, the lateral pallium and the dorsal pallium together appear to constitute an olfactory pallium in lungfishes. The medial pallium was found to consist of three immunohisthochemically distinct subdivisions–a dorsal cell group, an intermediate cell group, and a ventral cell group. These medial pallial fields extend throughout the entire rostrocaudal extent of the medial wall of the telencephalon. Although one or more of these medial pallial cell groups may be homologous to specific portions of the medial pallium in land vertebrates, no specific similarities were observed to support any proposed one-to-one correspondences. The possibility that one or more of the medial pallial cell groups of lungfishes correspond to cell groups located in the dorsal pallium of land vertebrates could not be excluded. The subpallium is divided into lateral, medial, and caudal subdivisions. The lateral subdivision appears to be homologous to the basal ganglia of land vertebrates since it contains neuropeptide/neurotransmitter-specific neuronal populations that are characterstic of the striatal and pallidal portions of the basal ganglia of amniotes. The medial subdivision of the subpallium shows the topographic and immunohistochemical characteristics of the septal region and the nucleus accumbens region of the amniote telencephalon. The caudal subpallium does not show any distinctive immunohistochemical labeling characteristics and its possible homologue in land vertebrates is unclear. The present results indicate that the evolution of the telencephalon during the transition from fish to amphibians must have been characterized by a striking conservatism in the case of the subpallium. A basal ganglia and a septal region having many of the characteristics of those of land vertebrates appear to be present in the telencephalon of lungfishes, thereby suggesting that these cell groups were already present in the brains of the earliest lobe-finned fishes. Although the present results suggest that a lateral pallium, or olfactory cortex, was present in the telencephalon of ancestral lobe-finned fish, they do not provide evidence to support the existence in lobe-finned fish of a forerunner of the dorsal pallium of land vertebrates. Further, it is unclear whether the medial pallial cell groups in lungfishes are homologous to cell groups in the medial telencephalic walls of land vertebrates.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50032/1/902560313_ftp.pd
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