993 research outputs found
Influence of intermartensitic transitions on transport properties of Ni2.16Mn0.84Ga alloy
Magnetic, transport, and x-ray diffraction measurements of ferromagnetic
shape memory alloy NiMnGa revealed that this alloy undergoes
an intermartensitic transition upon cooling, whereas no such a transition is
observed upon subsequent heating. The difference in the modulation of the
martensite forming upon cooling from the high-temperature austenitic state
[5-layered (5M) martensite], and the martensite forming upon the
intermartensitic transition [7-layered (7M) martensite] strongly affects the
magnetic and transport properties of the alloy and results in a large thermal
hysteresis of the resistivity and magnetization . The
intermartensitic transition has an especially marked influence on the transport
properties, as is evident from a large difference in the resistivity of the 5M
and 7M martensite, , which is larger than the jump of resistivity at
the martensitic transition from the cubic austenitic phase to the monoclinic 5M
martensitic phase. We assume that this significant difference in between
the martensitic phases is accounted for by nesting features of the Fermi
surface. It is also suggested that the nesting hypothesis can explain the
uncommon behavior of the resistivity at the martensitic transition, observed in
stoichiometric and near-stoichiometric Ni-Mn-Ga alloys.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, REVTEX
Magnetic field dependence of galfenol elastic properties
Elastic shear moduli measurements on Fe100−xGax (x = 12–33) single crystals (via resonant ultrasound spectroscopy) with and without a magnetic field and within 4–300 K are reported. The pronounced softening of the tetragonal shear modulus c′ is concluded to be, based on magnetoelastic coupling, the cause of the second peak in the tetragonal magnetostriction constant λ100 near x = 28. Exceedingly high ΔE effects ( ∼ 25%), combined with the extreme softness in c′ (c′\u3c10 GPa), suggest structural changes take place, yet, gradual in nature, as the moduli show a smooth dependence on Ga concentration, temperature, and magnetic field. Shear anisotropy (c44/c′) as high as 14.7 was observed for Fe71.2Ga28.8
Resonant Cyclotron Radiation Transfer Model Fits to Spectra from Gamma-Ray Burst GRB870303
We demonstrate that models of resonant cyclotron radiation transfer in a
strong field (i.e. cyclotron scattering) can account for spectral lines seen at
two epochs, denoted S1 and S2, in the Ginga data for GRB870303. Using a
generalized version of the Monte Carlo code of Wang et al. (1988,1989b), we
model line formation by injecting continuum photons into a static
plane-parallel slab of electrons threaded by a strong neutron star magnetic
field (~ 10^12 G) which may be oriented at an arbitrary angle relative to the
slab normal. We examine two source geometries, which we denote "1-0" and "1-1,"
with the numbers representing the relative electron column densities above and
below the continuum photon source plane. We compare azimuthally symmetric
models, i.e. models in which the magnetic field is parallel to the slab normal,
with models having more general magnetic field orientations. If the bursting
source has a simple dipole field, these two model classes represent line
formation at the magnetic pole, or elsewhere on the stellar surface. We find
that the data of S1 and S2, considered individually, are consistent with both
geometries, and with all magnetic field orientations, with the exception that
the S1 data clearly favor line formation away from a polar cap in the 1-1
geometry, with the best-fit model placing the line-forming region at the
magnetic equator. Within both geometries, fits to the combined (S1+S2) data
marginally favor models which feature equatorial line formation, and in which
the observer's orientation with respect to the slab changes between the two
epochs. We interpret this change as being due to neutron star rotation, and we
place limits on the rotation period.Comment: LaTeX2e (aastex.cls included); 45 pages text, 17 figures (on 21
pages); accepted by ApJ (to be published 1 Nov 1999, v. 525
The HADES Tracking System
The tracking system of the dielectron spectrometer HADES at GSI Darmstadt is
formed out of 24 low-mass, trapezoidal multi-layer drift chambers providing in
total about 30 square meter of active area. Low multiple scattering in the in
total four planes of drift chambers before and after the magnetic field is
ensured by using helium-based gas mixtures and aluminum cathode and field
wires. First in-beam performance results are contrasted with expectations from
simulations. Emphasis is placed on the energy loss information, exploring its
relevance regarding track recognition.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, presented at the 10th Vienna Conference on
Instrumentation, Vienna, February 2004, to be published in NIM A (special
issue
Magnetic properties of Ni2.18Mn0.82Ga Heusler alloys with a coupled magnetostructural transition
Polycrystalline Ni2.18Mn0.82Ga Heusler alloys with a coupled
magnetostructural transition are studied by differential scanning calorimetry,
magnetic and resistivity measurements. Coupling of the magnetic and structural
subsystems results in unusual magnetic features of the alloy. These uncommon
magnetic properties of Ni2.18Mn0.82Ga are attributed to the first-order
structural transition from a tetragonal ferromagnetic to a cubic paramagnetic
phase.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revtex
An upper limit on hypertriton production in collisions of Ar(1.76 AGeV)+KCl
A high-statistic data sample of Ar(1.76 AGeV)+KCl events recorded with HADES
is used to search for a hypertriton signal. An upper production limit per
centrality-triggered event of x on the level is
derived. Comparing this value with the number of successfully reconstructed
hyperons allows to determine an upper limit on the ratio
, which is confronted with statistical and
coalescence-type model calculations
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