74,475 research outputs found

    Local Spin Susceptibility of the S=1/2 Kagome Lattice in ZnCu3(OD)6Cl2

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    We report single-crystal 2-D NMR investigation of the nearly ideal spin S=1/2 kagome lattice ZnCu3(OD)6Cl2. We successfully identify 2-D NMR signals originating from the nearest-neighbors of Cu2+ defects occupying Zn sites. From the 2-D Knight shift measurements, we demonstrate that weakly interacting Cu2+ spins at these defects cause the large Curie-Weiss enhancement toward T=0 commonly observed in the bulk susceptibility data. We estimate the intrinsic spin susceptibility of the kagome planes by subtracting defect contributions, and explore several scenarios.Comment: 4 figures; published in PR-B Rapid Communication

    Graviton-photon conversion on spin 0 and 1/2 particles

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    The differential cross-sections for scattering of gravitons into photons on bosons and fermions are calculated in linearized quantum gravity. They are found to be strongly peaked in the forward direction and become constant at high energies. Numerically, they are very small as expected for such gravitational interactions.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX with 5 figure

    A simulation of the IPS variations from a magnetohydrodynamical simulation

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    Calculations of the variations of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) from a disturbance simulated by a 3-D magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) model of the solar wind are presented. The simulated maps are compared with observations and it is found that the MHD model reproduces the qualitative features of observed disturbances. The disturbance produced by the MHD simulation is found to correspond in strength with the weakest disturbance which can be reliably detected by existing single station IPS observations

    Magnetoresistance in the superconducting state at the (111) LaAlO3_3/SrTiO3_3 interface

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    Condensed matter systems that simultaneously exhibit superconductivity and ferromagnetism are rare due the antagonistic relationship between conventional spin-singlet superconductivity and ferromagnetic order. In materials in which superconductivity and magnetic order is known to coexist (such as some heavy-fermion materials), the superconductivity is thought to be of an unconventional nature. Recently, the conducting gas that lives at the interface between the perovskite band insulators LaAlO3_3 (LAO) and SrTiO3_3 (STO) has also been shown to host both superconductivity and magnetism. Most previous research has focused on LAO/STO samples in which the interface is in the (001) crystal plane. Relatively little work has focused on the (111) crystal orientation, which has hexagonal symmetry at the interface, and has been predicted to have potentially interesting topological properties, including unconventional superconducting pairing states. Here we report measurements of the magnetoresistance of (111) LAO/STO heterostructures at temperatures at which they are also superconducting. As with the (001) structures, the magnetoresistance is hysteretic, indicating the coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity, but in addition, we find that this magnetoresistance is anisotropic. Such an anisotropic response is completely unexpected in the superconducting state, and suggests that (111) LAO/STO heterostructures may support unconventional superconductivity.Comment: 6 Pages 4 figure

    Superconductivity and Frozen Electronic States at the (111) LaAlO3_3/SrTiO3_3 Interface

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    In spite of Anderson's theorem, disorder is known to affect superconductivity in conventional s-wave superconductors. In most superconductors, the degree of disorder is fixed during sample preparation. Here we report measurements of the superconducting properties of the two-dimensional gas that forms at the interface between LaAlO3_3 (LAO) and SrTiO3_3 (STO) in the (111) crystal orientation, a system that permits \emph{in situ} tuning of carrier density and disorder by means of a back gate voltage VgV_g. Like the (001) oriented LAO/STO interface, superconductivity at the (111) LAO/STO interface can be tuned by VgV_g. In contrast to the (001) interface, superconductivity in these (111) samples is anisotropic, being different along different interface crystal directions, consistent with the strong anisotropy already observed other transport properties at the (111) LAO/STO interface. In addition, we find that the (111) interface samples "remember" the backgate voltage VFV_F at which they are cooled at temperatures near the superconducting transition temperature TcT_c, even if VgV_g is subsequently changed at lower temperatures. The low energy scale and other characteristics of this memory effect (<1<1 K) distinguish it from charge-trapping effects previously observed in (001) interface samples.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Figure

    Recoverable Information and Emergent Conservation Laws in Fracton Stabilizer Codes

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    We introduce a new quantity, that we term recoverable information, defined for stabilizer Hamiltonians. For such models, the recoverable information provides a measure of the topological information, as well as a physical interpretation, which is complementary to topological entanglement entropy. We discuss three different ways to calculate the recoverable information, and prove their equivalence. To demonstrate its utility, we compute recoverable information for fracton models using all three methods where appropriate. From the recoverable information, we deduce the existence of emergent Z2Z_2 Gauss-law type constraints, which in turn imply emergent Z2Z_2 conservation laws for point-like quasiparticle excitations of an underlying topologically ordered phase.Comment: Added additional cluster model calculation (SPT example) and a new section discussing the general benefits of recoverable informatio
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