3,583 research outputs found
A superconducting absolute spin valve
A superconductor with a spin-split excitation spectrum behaves as an ideal
ferromagnetic spin-injector in a tunneling junction. It was theoretical
predicted that the combination of two such spin-split superconductors with
independently tunable magnetizations, may be used as an ideal
spin-valve. Here we report on the first switchable superconducting spin-valve
based on two EuS/Al bilayers coupled through an aluminum oxide tunnel barrier.
The spin-valve shows a relative resistance change between the parallel and
antiparallel configuration of the EuS layers up to 900% that demonstrates a
highly spin-polarized currents through the junction. Our device may be pivotal
for realization of thermoelectric radiation detectors, logical element for a
memory cell in cryogenics superconductor-based computers and superconducting
spintronics in general.Comment: 6 pages, 4 color figures, 1 tabl
Analysis of the absorption and emission spectra of U4+ in α-ThBr 4
The low temperature form α-ThBr4 has a scheelite structure I41/a in which the tetravalent uranium occupies the thorium site which is S4. Assuming that the ground state remains Γ 4 as in the β-ThBr4 form, the polarized absorption spectrum at 4.2 K shows that D2d is a good approximation. A peculiarity of this host is the exaltation of very numerous fluorescences of U4+ which permit to assign four Stark levels of the ground state 3H4 : Γ5 at 110 cm-1, Γ 1 at 473 cm-1, Γ1 at 623 cm-1 and Γ5 at 830 cm-1. 30 levels have been assigned and the crystal field parameters of U4+ (5f2) have been calculated in the D2d approximation : B20 = - 382, B40 = - 3 262, B44 = - 1734, B60 = - 851 and B64 = - 1828 cm-1. It is interesting to note that a small distortion in the scheelite structure of the α-ThBr4 compared with the zircon structure β-ThBr4 induces important changes in the crystal field parameters
Anti-bunched photons from a lateral light-emitting diode
We demonstrate anti-bunched emission from a lateral-light emitting diode.
Sub-Poissonian emission statistic, with a g(0)=0.7, is achieved at
cryogenic temperature in the pulsed low-current regime, by exploiting electron
injection through shallow impurities located in the diode depletion region.
Thanks to its simple fabrication scheme and to its modulation bandwidth in the
GHz range, we believe our devices are an appealing substitute for
highly-attenuated lasers in existing quantum-key-distribution systems. Our
devices outperform strongly-attenuated lasers in terms of multi-photon emission
events and can therefore lead to a significant security improvement in existing
quantum key distribution systems
Surface-acoustic-wave driven planar light-emitting device
Electroluminescence emission controlled by means of surface acoustic waves
(SAWs) in planar light-emitting diodes (pLEDs) is demonstrated. Interdigital
transducers for SAW generation were integrated onto pLEDs fabricated following
the scheme which we have recently developed. Current-voltage, light-voltage and
photoluminescence characteristics are presented at cryogenic temperatures. We
argue that this scheme represents a valuable building block for advanced
optoelectronic architectures
A tomographic setting for quasi-distribution functions
The method of constructing the tomographic probability distributions
describing quantum states in parallel with density operators is presented.
Known examples of Husimi-Kano quasi-distribution and photon number tomography
are reconsidered in the new setting. New tomographic schemes based on coherent
states and nonlinear coherent states of deformed oscillators, including
q-oscillators, are suggested. The associated identity decompositions providing
Gram-Schmidt operators are explicitly given, and contact with the Agarwal-Wolf
-operator ordering theory is made.Comment: A slightly enlarged version in which contact with the Agarwal-Wolf
-operator ordering theory is mad
Feshbach resonances in ultracold K(39)
We discover several magnetic Feshbach resonances in collisions of ultracold
K(39) atoms, by studying atom losses and molecule formation. Accurate
determination of the magnetic-field resonance locations allows us to optimize a
quantum collision model for potassium isotopes. We employ the model to predict
the magnetic-field dependence of scattering lengths and of near-threshold
molecular levels. Our findings will be useful to plan future experiments on
ultracold potassium atoms and molecules.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Optical supercavitation in soft-matter
We investigate theoretically, numerically and experimentally nonlinear
optical waves in an absorbing out-of-equilibrium colloidal material at the
gelification transition. At sufficiently high optical intensity, absorption is
frustrated and light propagates into the medium. The process is mediated by the
formation of a matter-shock wave due to optically induced thermodiffusion, and
largely resembles the mechanism of hydrodynamical supercavitation, as it is
accompanied by a dynamic phase-transition region between the beam and the
absorbing material.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, revised version: corrected typos and reference
Collisional properties of ultracold K-Rb mixtures
We determine the inter-species s-wave triplet scattering length a3 for all
K-Rb isotopic mixtures by measuring the cross-section for collisions between
41K and 87Rb in different temperature regimes. The positive value
a3=+163(+57,-12)a0 ensures the stability of binary 41K-87Rb Bose-Einstein
condensates. For the fermion-boson mixture 40K-87Rb we obtain a large and
negative scattering length which implies an efficient sympathetic cooling of
the fermionic species down to the degenerate regime.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; revised version (references added and small
changes
Europium retention onto clay minerals from 25 to 150 °C: Experimental measurements, spectroscopic features and sorption modelling
The sorption of Eu(III) onto kaolinite and montmorillonite was investigated up to 150 °C. The clays were purified samples, saturated with Na in the case of montmorillonite. Batch experiments were conducted at 25, 40, 80 and 150 °C in 0.5 M NaClO4 solutions to measure the distribution coefficients (Kd) of Eu as a trace element (<10−6 mol/L) between the solution and kaolinite. For the Na-montmorillonite, we used Kd results from a previous study [Tertre, E., Berger, G., Castet, S., Loubet, M., Giffaut, E., 2005. Experimental study of adsorption of Ni2+, Cs+ and Ln3+ onto Na-montmorillonite up to 150 °C. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 69, 4937–4948] obtained under exactly the same conditions. The number and nature of the Eu species sorbed onto both clay minerals were investigated by time resolved laser fluorescence spectroscopy (TRLFS) in specific experiments in the same temperature range. We identified a unique inner-sphere complex linked to the aluminol sites in both clays, assumed to be double bond; length as m-dashAlOEu2+ at the edge of the particles, and a second exchangeable outer-sphere complex for montmorillonite, probably in an interlayer position. The Kd values were used to adjust the parameters of a surface complexation model (DLM: diffuse layer model) from 25 to 150 °C. The number of Eu complexes and the stoichiometry of reactions were constrained by TRLFS. The acidity constants of the amphoteric aluminol sites were taken from another study [Tertre, E., Castet, S., Berger, G., Loubet, M., Giffaut, E. Acid/base surface chemistry of kaolinite and Na-montmorillonite at 25 and 60 °C: experimental study and modelling. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, in press], which integrates the influence of the negative structural charge of clays on the acid/base properties of edge sites as a function of temperature and ionic strength. The results of the modelling show that the observed shift of the sorption edge towards low pH with increasing temperature results solely from the contribution of the double bond; length as m-dashAlOEu2+ edge complexes. Finally, we successfully tested the performance of our model by confronting the predictions with experimental Kd data. We used our own data obtained at lower ionic strength (previous study) or higher suspension density and higher starting concentration (TRLFS runs, this study), as well as published data from other experimental studies [Bradbury, M.H., Baeyens, B., 2002. Sorption of Eu on Na and Ca-montmorillonite: experimental investigations and modeling with cation exchange and surface complexation. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 66, 2325–2334; Kowal-Fouchard, A., 2002. Etude des mécanismes de rétention des ions U(IV) et Eu(III) sur les argiles: influence des silicates. Ph.D. Thesis, Université Paris Sud, France, 330p]
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