1,607 research outputs found
Delayed feedback control of self-mobile cavity solitons
Control of the motion of cavity solitons is one the central problems in
nonlinear optical pattern formation. We report on the impact of the phase of
the time-delayed optical feedback and carrier lifetime on the self-mobility of
localized structures of light in broad area semiconductor cavities. We show
both analytically and numerically that the feedback phase strongly affects the
drift instability threshold as well as the velocity of cavity soliton motion
above this threshold. In addition we demonstrate that non-instantaneous carrier
response in the semiconductor medium is responsible for the increase in
critical feedback rate corresponding to the drift instability
Mass Transfer Mechanism in Real Crystals by Pulsed Laser Irradiation
The dynamic processes in the surface layers of metals subjected activity of a
pulsing laser irradiation, which destroyed not the crystalline structure in
details surveyed. The procedure of calculation of a dislocation density
generated in bulk of metal during the relaxation processes and at repeated
pulse laser action is presented. The results of evaluations coincide with high
accuracy with transmission electron microscopy dates. The
dislocation-interstitial mechanism of laser-stimulated mass-transfer in real
crystals is presented on the basis of the ideas of the interaction of structure
defects in dynamically deforming medium. The good compliance of theoretical and
experimental results approves a defining role of the presented mechanism of
mass transfer at pulse laser action on metals. The possible implementation this
dislocation-interstitial mechanism of mass transfer in metals to other cases of
pulsing influences is justifiedComment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Late
Low-frequency vortex dynamic susceptibility and relaxation in mesoscopic ferromagnetic dots
Vortex dynamics in a restricted geometry is considered for a magnetic system
consisting of ferromagnetic cylindrical dots. To describe the vortex dynamic
susceptibility and relaxation the equation of motion for the vortex center
position is applied. The dependencies of the vortex dynamic susceptibility and
resonance linewidth on geometrical parameters are calculated. A new method of
extracting damping parameter from the vortex low-frequency resonance peaks is
proposed and applied for interpretation of resonance data on FeNi circular
dots
Flux flow of Abrikosov-Josephson vortices along grain boundaries in high-temperature superconductors
We show that low-angle grain boundaries (GB) in high-temperature
superconductors exhibit intermediate Abrikosov vortices with Josephson cores,
whose length along GB is smaller that the London penetration depth, but
larger than the coherence length. We found an exact solution for a periodic
vortex structure moving along GB in a magnetic field and calculated the
flux flow resistivity , and the nonlinear voltage-current
characteristics. The predicted dependence describes well our
experimental data on unirradiated and irradiated
bicrystals, from which the core size , and the intrinsic depairing
density on nanoscales of few GB dislocations were measured for the
first time. The observed temperature dependence of
indicates a significant order parameter suppression in current channels between
GB dislocation cores.Comment: 5 pages 5 figures. Phys. Rev. Lett. (accepted
Cavity solitons in vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers
We investigate a control of the motion of localized structures of light by
means of delay feedback in the transverse section of a broad area nonlinear
optical system. The delayed feedback is found to induce a spontaneous motion of
a solitary localized structure that is stationary and stable in the absence of
feedback. We focus our analysis on an experimentally relevant system namely the
Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser (VCSEL). In the absence of the delay
feedback we present experimental evidence of stationary localized structures in
a 80 m aperture VCSEL. The spontaneous formation of localized structures
takes place above the lasing threshold and under optical injection. Then, we
consider the effect of the time-delayed optical feedback and investigate
analytically the role of the phase of the feedback and the carrier lifetime on
the self-mobility properties of the localized structures. We show that these
two parameters affect strongly the space time dynamics of two-dimensional
localized structures. We derive an analytical formula for the threshold
associated with drift instability of localized structures and a normal form
equation describing the slow time evolution of the speed of the moving
structure.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Solitons of the Resonant Nonlinear Schrodinger Equation with Nontrivial Boundary Conditions and Hirota Bilinear Method
Physically relevant soliton solutions of the resonant nonlinear Schrodinger
(RNLS) equation with nontrivial boundary conditions, recently proposed for
description of uniaxial waves in a cold collisionless plasma, are considered in
the Hirota bilinear approach. By the Madelung representation, the model is
transformed to the reaction-diffusion analog of the NLS equation for which the
bilinear representation, soliton solutions and their mutual interactions are
studied.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, talk presented in Workshop `Nonlinear Physics IV:
Theory and Experiment`, 22-30 June 2006, Gallipoli, Ital
Nonlocal feedback in ferromagnetic resonance
Ferromagnetic resonance in thin films is analyzed under the influence of
spatiotemporal feedback effects. The equation of motion for the magnetization
dynamics is nonlocal in both space and time and includes isotropic, anisotropic
and dipolar energy contributions as well as the conserved Gilbert- and the
non-conserved Bloch-damping. We derive an analytical expression for the
peak-to-peak linewidth. It consists of four separate parts originated by
Gilbert damping, Bloch-damping, a mixed Gilbert-Bloch component and a
contribution arising from retardation. In an intermediate frequency regime the
results are comparable with the commonly used Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert theory
combined with two-magnon processes. Retardation effects together with Gilbert
damping lead to a linewidth the frequency dependence of which becomes strongly
nonlinear. The relevance and the applicability of our approach to ferromagnetic
resonance experiments is discussed.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
Spin wave resonances in La_{0.7}Sr_{0.3}MnO_{3} films: measurement of spin wave stiffness and anisotropy field
We studied magnetic field dependent microwave absorption in epitaxial
LaSrMnO films using an X-band Bruker ESR spectrometer. By
analyzing angular and temperature dependence of the ferromagnetic and spin-wave
resonances we determine spin-wave stiffness and anisotropy field. The spin-wave
stiffness as found from the spectrum of the standing spin-wave resonances in
thin films is in fair agreement with the results of inelastic neutron
scattering studies on a single crystal of the same composition [Vasiliu-Doloc
et al., J. Appl. Phys. \textbf{83}, 7343 (1998)].Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures (now figure captions are included
On the validity of the Franck-Condon principle in the optical spectroscopy: optical conductivity of the Fr\"{o}hlich polaron
The optical absorption of the Fr\"{o}hlich polaron model is obtained by an
approximation-free Diagrammatic Monte Carlo method and compared with two new
approximate approaches that treat lattice relaxation effects in different ways.
We show that: i) a strong coupling expansion, based on the the Franck-Condon
principle, well describes the optical conductivity for large coupling strengths
(); ii) a Memory Function Formalism with phonon broadened levels
reproduces the optical response for weak coupling strengths ()
taking the dynamic lattice relaxation into account. In the coupling regime
the optical conductivity is a rapidly changing superposition of
both Franck-Condon and dynamic contributions.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
Nonresonant microwave absorption in epitaxial La-Sr-Mn-O films and its relation to colossal magnetoresistance
We study magnetic-field-dependent nonresonant microwave absorption and
dispersion in thin LaSrMnO films and show that it
originates from the colossal magnetoresistance. We develop the model for
magnetoresistance of a thin ferromagnetic film in oblique magnetic field. The
model accounts fairly well for our experimental findings, as well as for
results of other researchers. We demonstrate that nonresonant microwave
absorption is a powerful technique that allows contactless measurement of
magnetic properties of thin films, including magnetoresistance, anisotropy
field and coercive field.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figure
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