600 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Psychological Costs of Migration: Home Country Natural Disasters and Mental Health
The psychological toll of leaving one's familiar environment is a dominant explanation for why some people do not migrate despite relatively high wage differentials and low monetary costs of moving. Yet there is little direct empirical evidence on the existence and the characteristics of psychic costs. Using linked administrative and survey data (the 45 and Up Study) from Australia, a country where one in four residents was born overseas, we show that migrant mental health is significantly affected by home country natural disasters. In the three months following a disaster, mental health related drug use and visits to mental health specialists increase by 5% and 33%, respectively. The effects persist for up to 12 months after the initial shock and increase with distance to the home country. In contrast, we do not find any effects of home country disasters on the physical health conditions of migrants. Given that individuals in our sample have lived in their destination country for an average of 40 years, our estimates suggest strong persistence in these costs
Doped carrier formulation of the t-J model: the projection constraint and the effective Kondo-Heisenberg lattice representation
We show that the recently proposed doped carrier Hamiltonian formulation of
the t-J model should be complemented with the constraint that projects out the
unphysical states. With this new important ingredient, the previously used and
seemingly different spin-fermion representations of the t-J model are shown to
be gauge related to each other. This new constraint can be treated in a
controlled way close to half-filling suggesting that the doped carrier
representation provides an appropriate theoretical framework to address the t-J
model in this region. This constraint also suggests that the t-J model can be
mapped onto a Kondo-Heisenberg lattice model. Such a mapping highlights
important physical similarities between the quasi two-dimensional heavy
fermions and the high-T superconductors. Finally we discuss the physical
implications of our model representation relating in particular the small
versus large Fermi surface crossover to the closure of the lattice spin gap.Comment: corrected and enlarged versio
Thermal Conductivity of the Iron-Based Superconductor FeSe : Nodeless Gap with Strong Two-Band Character
The thermal conductivity of the iron-based superconductor FeSe was measured
at temperatures down to 50 mK in magnetic fields up to 17 T. In zero magnetic
field, the electronic residual linear term in the T = 0 limit, \kappa_0/T, is
vanishingly small. Application of a magnetic field H causes no increase in
\kappa_0/T initially. Those two observations show that there are no zero-energy
quasiparticles that carry heat and therefore no nodes in the superconducting
gap of FeSe. The full field dependence of \kappa_0/T has the classic shape of a
two-band superconductor, such as MgB2: it rises exponentially at very low
field, with a characteristic field H* << Hc2, and then more slowly up to the
upper critical field Hc2. This shows that the superconducting gap is very small
on one of the pockets in the Fermi surface of FeSe
Anisotropic states of two-dimensional electrons in high magnetic fields
We study the collective states formed by two-dimensional electrons in Landau
levels of index near half-filling. By numerically solving the
self-consistent Hartree-Fock (HF) equations for a set of oblique
two-dimensional lattices, we find that the stripe state is an anisotropic
Wigner crystal (AWC), and determine its precise structure for varying values of
the filling factor. Calculating the elastic energy, we find that the shear
modulus of the AWC is small but finite (nonzero) within the HF approximation.
This implies, in particular, that the long-wavelength magnetophonon mode in the
stripe state vanishes like as in an ordinary Wigner crystal, and not
like as was found in previous studies where the energy of shear
deformations was neglected.Comment: minor corrections; 5 pages, 4 figures; version to be published in
Physical Review Letter
The metallic transport of (TMTSF)_2X organic conductors close to the superconducting phase
Comparing resistivity data of quasi-one dimensional superconductors
(TMTSF)_2PF_6 and (TMTSF)_2ClO_4 along the least conducting c*-axis and along
the high conductivity a -axis as a function of temperature and pressure, a low
temperature regime is observed in which a unique scattering time governs
transport along both directions of these anisotropic conductors. However, the
pressure dependence of the anisotropy implies a large pressure dependence of
the interlayer coupling. This is in agreement with the results of
first-principles DFT calculations implying methyl group hyperconjugation in the
TMTSF molecule. In this low temperature regime, both materials exhibit for rc a
temperature dependence aT + bT^2. Taking into account the strong pressure
dependence of the anisotropy, the T-linear rc is found to correlate with the
suppression of the superconducting Tc, in close analogy with ra data. This work
is revealing the domain of existence of the 3D coherent regime in the generic
(TMTSF)_2X phase diagram and provides further support for the correlation
between T-linear resistivity and superconductivity in non-conventional
superconductors
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in YBa_2Cu_4O_8
We report the observation of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in the underdoped
cuprate superconductor YBaCuO (Y124). For field aligned along the
c-axis, the frequency of the oscillations is T, which corresponds
to % of the total area of the first Brillouin zone. The effective
mass of the quasiparticles on this orbit is measured to be times
the free electron mass. Both the frequency and mass are comparable to those
recently observed for ortho-II YBaCuO (Y123-II). We show that
although small Fermi surface pockets may be expected from band structure
calculations in Y123-II, no such pockets are predicted for Y124. Our results
therefore imply that these small pockets are a generic feature of the copper
oxide plane in underdoped cuprates.Comment: v2: Version of paper accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letters. Only minor changes to the text and reference
Quasiparticle Heat Transport in BaKFeAs: Evidence for a k-dependent Superconducting Gap without Nodes
The thermal conductivity of the iron-arsenide superconductor
BaKFeAs ( 30 K) was measured in single crystals
at temperatures down to mK (/600) and in magnetic
fields up to T (/4). A negligible residual linear term
in as shows that there are no zero-energy quasiparticles
in the superconducting state. This rules out the existence of line and in-plane
point nodes in the superconducting gap, imposing strong constraints on the
symmetry of the order parameter. It excludes d-wave symmetry, drawing a clear
distinction between these superconductors and the high- cuprates. However,
the fact that a magnetic field much smaller than can induce a residual
linear term indicates that the gap must be very small on part of the Fermi
surface, whether from strong anisotropy or band dependence, or both
Nodes in the gap structure of the iron-arsenide superconductor Ba(Fe_{1-x}Co_x)_2As_2 from c-axis heat transport measurements
The thermal conductivity k of the iron-arsenide superconductor
Ba(Fe_{1-x}Co_x)_2As_2 was measured down to 50 mK for a heat current parallel
(k_c) and perpendicular (k_a) to the tetragonal c axis, for seven Co
concentrations from underdoped to overdoped regions of the phase diagram (0.038
< x < 0.127). A residual linear term k_c0/T is observed in the T = 0 limit when
the current is along the c axis, revealing the presence of nodes in the gap.
Because the nodes appear as x moves away from the concentration of maximal T_c,
they must be accidental, not imposed by symmetry, and are therefore compatible
with an s_{+/-} state, for example. The fact that the in-plane residual linear
term k_a0/T is negligible at all x implies that the nodes are located in
regions of the Fermi surface that contribute strongly to c-axis conduction and
very little to in-plane conduction. Application of a moderate magnetic field
(e.g. H_c2/4) excites quasiparticles that conduct heat along the a axis just as
well as the nodal quasiparticles conduct along the c axis. This shows that the
gap must be very small (but non-zero) in regions of the Fermi surface which
contribute significantly to in-plane conduction. These findings can be
understood in terms of a strong k dependence of the gap Delta(k) which produces
nodes on a Fermi surface sheet with pronounced c-axis dispersion and deep
minima on the remaining, quasi-two-dimensional sheets.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures
- …
