6,986 research outputs found
Tunneling driven tilt modes of the O octahedra in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4}: strong dependence on doping
The anelastic spectrum of La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} (x = 0, 0.008, 0.019, 0.032) has
been measured down to 1.5 K, in order to see the effect of doping on the
intrinsic lattice fluctuations already found in stoichiometric La{2}CuO{4}, and
identified with tunneling driven tilt modes of the O octahedra. Slight doping
with Sr causes a drastic increase of the transition rates and relaxation
strength of the tunneling systems. The influence of doping on the relaxation
rate is interpreted in terms of direct coupling between between the tilts of
the octahedra and the hole excitations. However, the observed fast dependence
of the rate on temperature cannot be explained in terms of the ususal models of
coupling between a tunneling system and the conduction electrons.Comment: LaTeX, 5 figures in a single PostScript file, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Acoustic measurement of the low-energy excitations in Nd2-xCexCuO4
The complex dynamic Young's modulus of ceramic Nd2-xCexCuO4 with x = 0, 0.05
and 0.20 has been measured from 1.5 to 100 K at frequencies of 1-10 kHz. In the
undoped sample the modulus starts decreasing below ~20 K, instead of
approaching a constant value as in a normal solid. The modulus minimum has been
interpreted in terms of paraelastic contribution from the relaxation of the
Nd^3+ 4f electrons between the levels of the ground state doublet, which is
split by the interaction with the antiferromagnetically ordered Cu sublattice.
The value of the splitting is found to be 0.34 meV, in excellent agreement with
inelastic neutron scattering, infrared and specific heat experiments. With
doping, the anomaly shifts to lower temperature and decreases in amplitude,
consistently with a reduction of the local field from the Cu sublattice.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Anelastic spectroscopy study of the spin-glass and cluster spin-glass phases of LaSrCuO
The anelastic spectra of LaSrCuO have been measured at
liquid He temperatures slightly below and above the concentration which is considered to separate the spin-glass phase from the
cluster spin-glass (CSG) phase. For all the elastic energy loss
functions show a step below the temperature of freezing into
the CSG state, similarly to what found in samples well within the CSG phase,
but with a smaller amplitude. The excess dissipation in the CSG state is
attributed to the motion of the domain walls between the clusters of
antiferromagnetically correlated spin. These results are in agreement with the
recent proposal, based on inelastic neutron scattering, of an electronic phase
separation between regions with and , at least for
Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Stratospheric Variability and Trends in Models Used for the IPCC AR4
Atmosphere and ocean general circulation model (AOGCM) experiments for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) are analyzed to better understand model variability and assess the importance of various forcing mechanisms on stratospheric trends during the 20th century. While models represent the climatology of the stratosphere reasonably well in comparison with NCEP reanalysis, there are biases and large variability among models. In general, AOGCMs are cooler than NCEP throughout the stratosphere, with the largest differences in the tropics. Around half the AOGCMs have a top level beneath ~2 hPa and show a significant cold bias in their upper levels (~10 hPa) compared to NCEP, suggesting that these models may have compromised simulations near 10 hPa due to a low model top or insufficient stratospheric levels. In the lower stratosphere (50 hPa), the temperature variability associated with large volcanic eruptions is absent in about half of the models, and in the models that do include volcanic aerosols, half of those significantly overestimate the observed warming. There is general agreement on the vertical structure of temperature trends over the last few decades, differences between models are explained by the inclusion of different forcing mechanisms, such as stratospheric ozone depletion and volcanic aerosols. However, even when human and natural forcing agents are included in the simulations, significant differences remain between observations and model trends, particularly in the upper tropical troposphere (200 hPa–100 hPa), where, since 1979, models show a warming trend and the observations a cooling trend
Algebraic treatment of the confluent Natanzon potentials
Using the so(2,1) Lie algebra and the Baker, Campbell and Hausdorff formulas,
the Green's function for the class of the confluent Natanzon potentials is
constructed straightforwardly. The bound-state energy spectrum is then
determined. Eventually, the three-dimensional harmonic potential, the
three-dimensional Coulomb potential and the Morse potential may all be
considered as particular cases.Comment: 9 page
Anelastic relaxation process of polaronic origin in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4}: interaction between the charge stripes and pinning centers
The evolution of an anelastic relaxation process occurring around 80 K in
La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} at a measuring frequency of ~1 kHz has been followed from x
= 0.0075 to the overdoped region, x = 0.2, where it disappears. The dependence
of the peak intensity on doping is consistent with a polaronic mechanism,
identified with the disordered charge stripes overcoming pinning centers. A
marked decrease of the peak amplitude occurs at x > 0.045, the same doping
range where a change of the stripe order from parallel to diagonal with respect
to the Cu-O bonds has been observed by neutron diffraction. Both the energy
barrier and peak amplitude also exhibit a rise near x = 1/8.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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