47 research outputs found
Transport Measurements on Nano-engineered Two Dimensional Superconducting Wire Networks
Superconducting triangular Nb wire networks with high normal-state resistance
are fabricated by using a negative tone hydrogen silsesquioxane (HSQ) resist.
Robust magnetoresistance oscillations are observed up to high magnetic fields
and maintained at low temperatures, due to the eective reduction of wire
dimensions. Well-defined dips appear at integral and rational values (1/2, 1/3,
1/4) of the reduced flux f = Phi/Phi_0, which is the first observation in the
triangular wire networks. These results are well consistent with theoretical
calculations for the reduced critical temperature as a function of f.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Spin-phonon interaction and band effects in the high-T_C superconductor HgBa_2CuO_4
Band calculations show that a stripe-like anti-ferromagnetic spin wave is
enforced by a 'half-breathing' phonon distortion within the CuO plane of
HgBa_2CuO_4. This spin-phonon coupling is increased further by shear distortion
and by increased distance between Cu and apical oxygens. The effects from
spin-phonon coupling are consistent with many observations in high-T_C
materials. Spin-phonon coupling can be important for the mechanism of spin
fluctuations and superconductivity, although the effects are quantitatively
weak when using the local density potential.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Fluctuating diamagnetism in underdoped high temperature superconductors
The fluctuation induced diamagnetism of underdoped high temperature
superconductors is studied in the framework of the Lawrence-Doniach model. By
taking into account the fluctuations of the phase of the order parameter only,
the latter reduces to a layered XY-model describing a liquid of vortices which
can be either thermally excited or induced by the external magnetic field. The
diamagnetic response is given by a current-current correlation function which
is evaluated using the Coulomb gas analogy. Our results are then applied to
recent measurements of fluctuation diamagnetism in underdoped YBCO. They allow
to understand both the observed anomalous temperature dependence of the
zero-field susceptibility and the two distinct regimes appearing in the
magnetic field dependence of the magnetization.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures included, accepted for publication in PR
Vortex Lattice Melting into Disentangled Liquid Followed by the 3D-2D Decoupling Transition in YBa_2Cu_4O_8 Single Crystals
A sharp resistance drop associated with vortex lattice melting was observed
in high quality YBa_2Cu_4O_8 single crystals. The melting line is well
described well by the anisotropic GL theory. Two thermally activated flux flow
regions, which were separated by a crossover line B_cr=1406.5(1-T/T_c)/T
(T_c=79.0 K, B_cr in T), were observed in the vortex liquid phase. Activation
energy for each region was obtained and the corresponding dissipation mechanism
was discussed. Our results suggest that the vortex lattice in YBa_2Cu_4O_8
single crystal melts into disentangled liquid, which then undergoes a 3D-2D
decoupling transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, RevTex (Latex2.09
Broken-Symmetry States in Quantum Hall Superlattices
We argue that broken-symmetry states with either spatially diagonal or
spatially off-diagonal order are likely in the quantum Hall regime, for clean
multiple quantum well (MQW) systems with small layer separations. We find that
for MQW systems, unlike bilayers, charge order tends to be favored over
spontaneous interlayer coherence. We estimate the size of the interlayer
tunneling amplitude needed to stabilize superlattice Bloch minibands by
comparing the variational energies of interlayer-coherent superlattice miniband
states with those of states with charge order and states with no broken
symmetries. We predict that when coherent miniband ground states are stable,
strong interlayer electronic correlations will strongly enhance the
growth-direction tunneling conductance and promote the possibility of Bloch
oscillations.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX, 4 figures EPS, to be published in PR
Finite-time destruction of entanglement and non-locality by environmental influences
Entanglement and non-locality are non-classical global characteristics of
quantum states important to the foundations of quantum mechanics. Recent
investigations have shown that environmental noise, even when it is entirely
local in influence, can destroy both of these properties in finite time despite
giving rise to full quantum state decoherence only in the infinite time limit.
These investigations, which have been carried out in a range of theoretical and
experimental situations, are reviewed here.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, review article to appear in Foundations of
Physic
Critical-path-analysis-based dynamic component supplier optimization
10.1080/09511920500324290International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing188702-709ICIM
A valuation-based system approach for risk assessment of belief rule-based expert systems
International audienc
Extended LK heuristics for the optimization of linear consecutive-k-out-of-n: F systems considering parametric uncertainty and model uncertainty
International audienc