1,885 research outputs found
On the Mass Eigenstate Composition of the 8B Neutrinos from the Sun
The present data of gallium experiments provide indirectly the only
experimental limit on the fraction of mass eigenstate for the B
neutrinos from the Sun. However, if to use the experimental data alone, the
fraction of and, consequently, still is allowed to
be varied within a rather broad range. The further experimental efforts are
needed to clear this point.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, 1 table. Corrected version, published in
JCAP04(2007)00
Thermal suppression of surface barrier in ultrasmall superconducting structures
In the recent experiment by Cren \textit{et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett.
\textbf{102}, 127005 (2009)], no hysteresis for vortex penetration and
expulsion from the nano-island of Pb was observed. In the present paper, we
argue that this effect can be associated with the thermoactivated surmounting
of the surface barrier by a vortex. The typical entrance (exit) time is found
analytically from the Fokker-Planck equation, written in the form suitable for
the extreme vortex confinement. We show that this time is several orders of
magnitude smaller than 1 second under the conditions of the experiment
considered. Our results thus demonstrate a possibility for the thermal
suppression of the surface barrier in nanosized low- superconductors. We
also briefly discuss other recent experiments on vortices in related
structures.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Magnetism in Closed-shell Quantum Dots: Emergence of Magnetic Bipolarons
Similar to atoms and nuclei, semiconductor quantum dots exhibit formation of
shells. Predictions of magnetic behavior of the dots are often based on the
shell occupancies. Thus, closed-shell quantum dots are assumed to be inherently
nonmagnetic. Here, we propose a possibility of magnetism in such dots doped
with magnetic impurities. On the example of the system of two interacting
fermions, the simplest embodiment of the closed-shell structure, we demonstrate
the emergence of a novel broken-symmetry ground state that is neither
spin-singlet nor spin-triplet. We propose experimental tests of our predictions
and the magnetic-dot structures to perform them.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures;
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.177201; minor change
Magnetization dynamics in the single-molecule magnet Fe8 under pulsed microwave irradiation
We present measurements on the single molecule magnet Fe8 in the presence of
pulsed microwave radiation at 118 GHz. The spin dynamics is studied via time
resolved magnetization experiments using a Hall probe magnetometer. We
investigate the relaxation behavior of magnetization after the microwave pulse.
The analysis of the experimental data is performed in terms of different
contributions to the magnetization after-pulse relaxation. We find that the
phonon bottleneck with a characteristic relaxation time of 10 to 100 ms
strongly affects the magnetization dynamics. In addition, the spatial effect of
spin diffusion is evidenced by using samples of different sizes and different
ways of the sample's irradiation with microwaves.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
Stress induced dislocation roughening -- phase transition in 1d at finite temperature
We present an example of a generically forbidden phase transition in 1d at
finite temperature -- stress induced and thermally assisted roughening of a
superclimbing dislocation in a Peierls potential. We also argue that such
roughening is behind the strong suppression of the superflow through solid \he4
in a narrow temperature range recently observed by Ray and Hallock (Phys.Rev.
Lett. {\bf 105}, 145301 (2010)).Comment: 4 revtex pages, 5 figures. Replaced with the published versio
The role of Helium-3 impurities in the stress induced roughening of superclimbing dislocations in solid Helium-4
We analyze the stress induced and thermally assisted roughening of a forest
of superclimbing dislocations in a Peierls potential in the presence of
Helium-3 impurities and randomly frozen in static stresses. It is shown that
the temperature of the dip in the flow rate observed by Ray and Hallock
(Phys.Rev. Lett. {\bf 105}, 145301 (2010)) is determined by the energy of the
impurity activation from dislocation core. However, it is suppressed by,
essentially, the logarithm of the impurity fraction. The width of the dip is
determined by inhomogeneous fluctuations of the stresses and is shown to be
much smaller than .Comment: Submitted to the LT26-conference proceeding
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