12,964 research outputs found
Faraday-rotation fluctuation spectroscopy with static and oscillating magnetic fields
By Faraday-rotation fluctuation spectroscopy one measures the spin noise via
Faraday-induced fluctuations of the polarization plane of a laser transmitting
the sample. In the fist part of this paper, we present a theoretical model of
recent experiments on alkali gas vapors and semiconductors, done in the
presence of a {\em static} magnetic field. In a static field, the spin noise
shows a resonance line, revealing the Larmor frequency and the spin coherence
time of the electrons. Second, we discuss the possibility to use an {\em
oscillating} magnetic field in the Faraday setup. With an oscillating field
applied, one can observe multi-photon absorption processes in the spin noise.
Furthermore an oscillating field could also help to avoid line broadening due
to structural or chemical inhomogeneities in the sample, and thereby increase
the precision of the spin-coherence time measurement.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Differential effects of MDMA and methylphenidate on social cognition
Social cognition is important in everyday-life social interactions. The social cognitive effects of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, 'ecstasy') and methylphenidate (both used for neuroenhancement and as party drugs) are largely unknown. We investigated the acute effects of MDMA (75 mg), methylphenidate (40 mg) and placebo using the Facial Emotion Recognition Task, Multifaceted Empathy Test, Movie for the Assessment of Social Cognition, Social Value Orientation Test and the Moral Judgment Task in a cross-over study in 30 healthy subjects. Additionally, subjective, autonomic, pharmacokinetic, endocrine and adverse drug effects were measured. MDMA enhanced emotional empathy for positive emotionally charged situations in the MET and tended to reduce the recognition of sad faces in the Facial Emotion Recognition Task. MDMA had no effects on cognitive empathy in the Multifaceted Empathy Test or social cognitive inferences in the Movie for the Assessment of Social Cognition. MDMA produced subjective 'empathogenic' effects, such as drug liking, closeness to others, openness and trust. In contrast, methylphenidate lacked such subjective effects and did not alter emotional processing, empathy or mental perspective-taking. MDMA but not methylphenidate increased the plasma levels of oxytocin and prolactin. None of the drugs influenced moral judgment. Effects on emotion recognition and emotional empathy were evident at a low dose of MDMA and likely contribute to the popularity of the drug
Theory of spin Hall magnetoresistance
We present a theory of the spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) in multilayers
made from an insulating ferromagnet F, such as yttrium iron garnet (YIG), and a
normal metal N with spin-orbit interactions, such as platinum (Pt). The SMR is
induced by the simultaneous action of spin Hall and inverse spin Hall effects
and therefore a non-equilibrium proximity phenomenon. We compute the SMR in
FN and FNF layered systems, treating N by spin-diffusion theory with
quantum mechanical boundary conditions at the interfaces in terms of the
spin-mixing conductance. Our results explain the experimentally observed spin
Hall magnetoresistance in NF bilayers. For FNF spin valves we predict
an enhanced SMR amplitude when magnetizations are collinear. The SMR and the
spin-transfer torques in these trilayers can be controlled by the magnetic
configuration
Typical local measurements in generalised probabilistic theories: emergence of quantum bipartite correlations
What singles out quantum mechanics as the fundamental theory of Nature? Here
we study local measurements in generalised probabilistic theories (GPTs) and
investigate how observational limitations affect the production of
correlations. We find that if only a subset of typical local measurements can
be made then all the bipartite correlations produced in a GPT can be simulated
to a high degree of accuracy by quantum mechanics. Our result makes use of a
generalisation of Dvoretzky's theorem for GPTs. The tripartite correlations can
go beyond those exhibited by quantum mechanics, however.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure v2: more details in the proof of the main resul
All electrical manipulation of magnetization dynamics in a ferromagnet by antiferromagnets with anisotropic spin Hall effects
We investigate spin-orbit torques of metallic CuAu-I-type antiferromagnets
using spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance tuned by a dc-bias current. The
observed spin torques predominantly arise from diffusive transport of spin
current generated by the spin Hall effect. We find a growth-orientation
dependence of the spin torques by studying epitaxial samples, which may be
correlated to the anisotropy of the spin Hall effect. The observed anisotropy
is consistent with first-principles calculations on the intrinsic spin Hall
effect. Our work demonstrates large tunable spin-orbit effects in
magnetically-ordered materials.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. B (2015
Three-dimensional shear in granular flow
The evolution of granular shear flow is investigated as a function of height
in a split-bottom Couette cell. Using particle tracking, magnetic-resonance
imaging, and large-scale simulations we find a transition in the nature of the
shear as a characteristic height is exceeded. Below there is a
central stationary core; above we observe the onset of additional axial
shear associated with torsional failure. Radial and axial shear profiles are
qualitatively different: the radial extent is wide and increases with height
while the axial width remains narrow and fixed.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Quantum properties of dichroic silicon vacancies in silicon carbide
The controlled generation and manipulation of atom-like defects in solids has
a wide range of applications in quantum technology. Although various defect
centres have displayed promise as either quantum sensors, single photon
emitters or light-matter interfaces, the search for an ideal defect with
multi-functional ability remains open. In this spirit, we investigate here the
optical and spin properties of the V1 defect centre, one of the silicon vacancy
defects in the 4H polytype of silicon carbide (SiC). The V1 centre in 4H-SiC
features two well-distinguishable sharp optical transitions and a unique S=3/2
electronic spin, which holds promise to implement a robust spin-photon
interface. Here, we investigate the V1 defect at low temperatures using optical
excitation and magnetic resonance techniques. The measurements, which are
performed on ensemble, as well as on single centres, prove that this centre
combines coherent optical emission, with up to 40% of the radiation emitted
into the zero-phonon line (ZPL), a strong optical spin signal and long spin
coherence time. These results single out the V1 defect in SiC as a promising
system for spin-based quantum technologies
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