3,765 research outputs found
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies of non-stoichiometric superconducting NbB2+x
Polycrystalline samples of NbB2+x with nominal composition (B/Nb) = 2.0, 2.1,
2.2, 2.3, 2.4 and 2.5 were studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS).
The spectra revealed Nb and B oxides on the surface of the samples, mainly B2O3
and Nb2O5. After Ar ion etching the intensity of Nb and B oxides decreased. The
Nb 3d5/2 and B 1s core levels associated with the chemical states (B/Nb) were
identified and they do not change with etching time. The Binding Energy of the
Nb 3d5/2 and B 1s core levels increase as boron content increases, suggesting a
positive chemical shift in the core levels. On the other hand, analysis of
Valence Band spectra showed that the contribution of the Nb 4d states slightly
decreased while the contribution of the B 2p(pi) states increased as the boron
content increased. As a consequence, the electronic and superconducting
properties were substantially modified, in good agreement with band-structure
calculations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Synthesis by molten salt method of the AFeO3 system (A = La, Gd) and its structural, vibrational and internal hyperfine magnetic field characterization
Polycrystalline samples of LaFeO3 and GdFeO3 were synthesized by the molten
salt method. Some properties and the quality of the resulting compounds were
investigated. The crystal structure and purity of the samples was determined
through X-ray diffraction and Rietveld analysis. The vibrational properties
were characterized by Raman and IR spectroscopy. M\"ossbauer spectroscopy was
used to determine the ionic state of the Fe ions and the internal hyperfine
magnetic fields Considerable reduction of the heat treatment (temperature and
time) for the reaction to take place was achieved without detriment of the
quality of the compounds.Comment: 10 figure
Correlation between the transition temperature and the superfluid density in BCS superconductor NbB_2+x
The results of the muon-spin rotation experiments on BCS superconductors
NbB_2+x (x = 0.2, 0.34) are reported. Both samples, studied in the present
work, exhibit rather broad transitions to the superconducting state, suggesting
a distribution of the volume fractions with different transition temperatures
(T_c)'s. By taking these distributions into account, the dependence of the
inverse squared zero-temperature magnetic penetration depth (\lambda_0^{-2}) on
T_c was reconstructed for temperatures in the range 1.5K<T_c<8.0K.
\lambda_0^{-2} was found to obey the power law dependence \lambda_0^{-2}\propto
T_c^{3.1(1)} which appears to be common for some families of BCS
superconductors as, {\it e.g.}, Al doped MgB_2 and high-temperature cuprate
superconductors as underdoped YBa_2Cu_3O_{7-\delta}.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Implications of nonzero for the neutrino mass hierarchy
The Daya Bay, RENO, and Double Chooz experiments have discovered a large
non-zero value for . We present a global analysis that includes
these three experiments, Chooz, the Super-K atmospheric data, and the T2K and MINOS experiments that are sensitive to the
hierarchy and the sign of . We report preliminary results in which
we fix the mixing parameters other than to those from a recent
global analysis. Given there is no evidence for a non-zero CP violation, we
assume . T2K and MINOS lie in a region of where there is a
hierarchy degeneracy in the limit of and no matter
interaction. For non-zero , the symmetry is partially broken, but
a degeneracy under the simultaneous exchange of both hierarchy and the sign of
remains. Matter effects break this symmetry such that the
positions of the peaks in the oscillation probabilities maintain the two-fold
symmetry, while the magnitude of the oscillations is sensitive to the
hierarchy. This renders T2K and NOA, with different baselines and
different matter effects, better able in combination to distinguish the
hierarchy and the sign of . The large value of
yields effects from atmospheric data that distinguish hierarchies. We find for
normal hierarchy, positive ,
and is 0.2% probable it is the correct combination; for normal hierarchy,
negative , and is 2.2%
probable; for inverse hierarchy, positive ,
and is 7.1% probable; for inverse hierarchy,
negative , and is 90.5%
probable, results that are inconsistent with two similar analyses.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Horizons of Innovative Theories,
Experiments, and Supercomputing in Nuclear Physics (New Orleans, June 4-6,
2012
Calculating error bars for neutrino mixing parameters
One goal of contemporary particle physics is to determine the mixing angles
and mass-squared differences that constitute the phenomenological constants
that describe neutrino oscillations. Of great interest are not only the best
fit values of these constants but also their errors. Some of the neutrino
oscillation data is statistically poor and cannot be treated by normal
(Gaussian) statistics. To extract confidence intervals when the statistics are
not normal, one should not utilize the value for chisquare versus confidence
level taken from normal statistics. Instead, we propose that one should use the
normalized likelihood function as a probability distribution; the relationship
between the correct chisquare and a given confidence level can be computed by
integrating over the likelihood function. This allows for a definition of
confidence level independent of the functional form of the !2 function; it is
particularly useful for cases in which the minimum of the !2 function is near a
boundary. We present two pedagogic examples and find that the proposed method
yields confidence intervals that can differ significantly from those obtained
by using the value of chisquare from normal statistics. For example, we find
that for the first data release of the T2K experiment the probability that
chisquare is not zero, as defined by the maximum confidence level at which the
value of zero is not allowed, is 92%. Using the value of chisquare at zero and
assigning a confidence level from normal statistics, a common practice, gives
the over estimation of 99.5%.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
H-alpha observations of the gamma-ray-emitting Be/X-ray binary LSI+61303: orbital modulation, disk truncation, and long-term variability
We report 138 spectral observations of the H-alpha emission line of the
radio- and gamma-ray-emitting Be/X-ray binary LSI+61303 obtained during the
period of September 1998 -- January 2013. From measuring various H-alpha
parameters, we found that the orbital modulation of the H-alpha is best visible
in the equivalent width ratio EW(B)/EW(R), the equivalent width of the blue
hump, and in the radial velocity of the central dip. The periodogram analysis
confirmed that the H-alpha emission is modulated with the orbital and
superorbital periods. For the past 20 years the radius of the circumstellar
disk is similar to the Roche lobe size at the periastron. It is probably
truncated by a 6:1 resonance. The orbital maximum of the equivalent width of
H-alpha emission peaks after the periastron and coincides on average with the
X-ray and gamma-ray maxima. All the spectra are available upon request from the
authors and through the CDS.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in A&
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