The specific heat, magnetic susceptibility and ESR signals of a Na-deficient
vanadate Na_xV_2O_5 (x=1.00 - 0.90) were studied in the temperature range 0.07
- 10 K, well below the transition point to a spin-gap state. The contribution
of defects provided by sodium vacancies to the specific heat was observed. It
has a low temperature part which does not tend to zero till at least 0.3 K and
a high temperature power-like tail appears above 2 K. Such dependence may
correspond to the existence of local modes and correlations between defects in
V-O layers. The magnetic measurements and ESR data reveal S=1/2 degrees of
freedom for the defects, with their effective number increasing in temperature
and under magnetic field. The latter results in the nonsaturating magnetization
at low temperature. No long-range magnetic ordering in the system of defects
was found. A model for the defects based on electron jumps near vacancies is
proposed to explain the observed effects. The concept of a frustrated
two-dimensional correlated magnet induced by the defects is considered to be
responsible for the absence of magnetic ordering.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure