4,943 research outputs found
Magnonic momentum transfer force on domain walls confined in space
Momentum transfer from incoming magnons to a Bloch domain wall is calculated
using one dimensional continuum micromagnetic analysis. Due to the confinement
of the wall in space, the dispersion relation of magnons is different from that
of a single domain. This mismatch of dispersion relations can result in
reflection of magnons upon incidence on the domain wall, whose direct
consequence is a transfer of momentum between magnons and the domain wall. The
corresponding counteraction force exerted on the wall can be used for the
control of domain wall motion through magnonic linear momentum transfer, in
analogy with the spin transfer torque induced by magnonic angular momentum
transfer.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure, published versio
Determination of the - mixing angle
We extract - mixing angle and the ratios of decay
constants of light pseudoscalar mesons , and using
recently available BaBar measurements on -photon and -photon
transition form factors and more accurate experimental data for the masses and
two-photon decay widths of the light pseduoscalar mesons.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, no figures, accepted for publication as a Brief
Report in Physical Review
Magnonic band structure of domain wall magnonic crystals
Magnonic crystals are prototype magnetic metamaterials designed for the
control of spin wave propagation. Conventional magnonic crystals are composed
of single domain elements. If magnetization textures, such as domain walls,
vortices and skyrmions, are included in the building blocks of magnonic
crystals, additional degrees of freedom over the control of the magnonic band
structure can be achieved. We theoretically investigate the influence of domain
walls on the spin wave propagation and the corresponding magnonic band
structure. It is found that the rotation of magnetization inside a domain wall
introduces a geometric vector potential for the spin wave excitation. The
corresponding Berry phase has quantized value , where is the
winding number of the domain wall. Due to the topological vector potential, the
magnonic band structure of magnonic crystals with domain walls as comprising
elements differs significantly from an identical magnonic crystal composed of
only magnetic domains. This difference can be utilized to realize dynamic
reconfiguration of magnonic band structure by a sole nucleation or annihilation
of domain walls in magnonic crystals.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
Numerical methods for coupled reconstruction and registration in digital breast tomosynthesis.
Digital Breast Tomosynthesis (DBT) provides an insight into the fine details of normal fibroglandular tissues and abnormal lesions by reconstructing a pseudo-3D image of the breast. In this respect, DBT overcomes a major limitation of conventional X-ray mam- mography by reducing the confounding effects caused by the superposition of breast tissue. In a breast cancer screening or diagnostic context, a radiologist is interested in detecting change, which might be indicative of malignant disease. To help automate this task image registration is required to establish spatial correspondence between time points. Typically, images, such as MRI or CT, are first reconstructed and then registered. This approach can be effective if reconstructing using a complete set of data. However, for ill-posed, limited-angle problems such as DBT, estimating the deformation is com- plicated by the significant artefacts associated with the reconstruction, leading to severe inaccuracies in the registration. This paper presents a mathematical framework, which couples the two tasks and jointly estimates both image intensities and the parameters of a transformation. Under this framework, we compare an iterative method and a simultaneous method, both of which tackle the problem of comparing DBT data by combining reconstruction of a pair of temporal volumes with their registration. We evaluate our methods using various computational digital phantoms, uncom- pressed breast MR images, and in-vivo DBT simulations. Firstly, we compare both iter- ative and simultaneous methods to the conventional, sequential method using an affine transformation model. We show that jointly estimating image intensities and parametric transformations gives superior results with respect to reconstruction fidelity and regis- tration accuracy. Also, we incorporate a non-rigid B-spline transformation model into our simultaneous method. The results demonstrate a visually plausible recovery of the deformation with preservation of the reconstruction fidelity
Influence of device geometry on tunneling in \nu=5/2 quantum Hall liquid
Two recent experiments [I. P. Radu et al., Science 320, 899 (2008) and X. Lin
et al., Phys. Rev. B 85, 165321 (2012)] measured the temperature and voltage
dependence of the quasiparticle tunneling through a quantum point contact in
the \nu= 5/2 quantum Hall liquid. The results led to conflicting conclusions
about the nature of the quantum Hall state. In this paper, we show that the
conflict can be resolved by recognizing different geometries of the devices in
the experiments. We argue that in some of those geometries there is significant
unscreened electrostatic interaction between the segments of the quantum Hall
edge on the opposite sides of the point contact. Coulomb interaction affects
the tunneling current. We compare experimental results with theoretical
predictions for the Pfaffian, SU(2)_2, 331 and K=8 states and their
particle-hole conjugates. After Coulomb corrections are taken into account,
measurements in all geometries agree with the spin-polarized and
spin-unpolarized Halperin 331 states.Comment: Final version as accepted by PR
The SU(3) bosons and the spin nematic state on the spin-1 bilinear-biquadratic triangular lattice
A bond-operator mean-field theory in the SU(3) bosons representation is
developed to describe the antiferro-nematic phase of the spin-1
bilinear-biquadratic model. The calculated static structure factors reveal
delicately that the antiferro-nematic state may exhibit both the ferro- and
antiferro-quadruple long-range orders, which is reminiscent of the ferrimagnets
or the canted antiferromagnets. This result may influence the spin wave theory
concerned with this phase. Possible relevance of this unconventional state to
the quasi-two-dimensional triangular material NiGa2S4 is addressed.Comment: 8pages, 6figure
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