2,867 research outputs found
Electric readout of magnetization dynamics in a ferromagnet-semiconductor system
We apply an analysis of time-dependent spin-polarized current in a
semiconductor channel at room temperature to establish how the magnetization
configuration and dynamics of three ferromagnetic terminals, two of them biased
and third connected to a capacitor, affect the currents and voltages. In a
steady state, the voltage on the capacitor is related to spin accumulation in
the channel. When the magnetization of one of the terminals is rotated, a
transient current is triggered. This effect can be used for electrical
detection of magnetization reversal dynamics of an electrode or for dynamical
readout of the alignment of two magnetic contacts.Comment: Revised version, 8 pages, 3 figure
Density-relaxation part of the self energy
A comment is made on the large-cluster limit of the self-energy correction for the quasiparticle energy gap in silicon clusters presented by Serdar Ogut, James R. Chelikowsky and Steven G. Louie in Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 1770 (1997)
High temperature thermal conductivity of 2-leg spin-1/2 ladders
Based on numerical simulations, a study of the high temperature, finite
frequency, thermal conductivity of spin-1/2 ladders is
presented. The exact diagonalization and a novel Lanczos technique are
employed.The conductivity spectra, analyzed as a function of rung coupling,
point to a non-diverging limit but to an unconventional low frequency
behavior. The results are discussed with perspective recent experiments
indicating a significant magnetic contribution to the energy transport in
quasi-one dimensional compounds.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Eigenvalue spectrum for single particle in a spheroidal cavity: A Semiclassical approach
Following the semiclassical formalism of Strutinsky et al., we have obtained
the complete eigenvalue spectrum for a particle enclosed in an infinitely high
spheroidal cavity. Our spheroidal trace formula also reproduces the results of
a spherical billiard in the limit . Inclusion of repetition of each
family of the orbits with reference to the largest one significantly improves
the eigenvalues of sphere and an exact comparison with the quantum mechanical
results is observed upto the second decimal place for . The
contributions of the equatorial, the planar (in the axis of symmetry plane) and
the non-planar(3-Dimensional) orbits are obtained from the same trace formula
by using the appropriate conditions. The resulting eigenvalues compare very
well with the quantum mechanical eigenvalues at normal deformation. It is
interesting that the partial sum of equatorial orbits leads to eigenvalues with
maximum angular momentum projection, while the summing of planar orbits leads
to eigenvalues with except for L=1. The remaining quantum mechanical
eigenvalues are observed to arise from the 3-dimensional(3D) orbits. Very few
spurious eigenvalues arise in these partial sums. This result establishes the
important role of 3D orbits even at normal deformations.Comment: 17 pages, 7 ps figure
Many-body diagrammatic expansion in a Kohn-Sham basis: implications for Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory of excited states
We formulate diagrammatic rules for many-body perturbation theory which uses
Kohn-Sham (KS) Green's functions as basic propagators. The diagram technique
allows to study the properties of the dynamic nonlocal exchange-correlation
(xc) kernel . We show that the spatial non-locality of is
strongly frequency-dependent. In particular, in extended systems the
non-locality range diverges at the excitation energies. This divergency is
related to the discontinuity of the xc potential.Comment: 4 RevTeX pages including 3 eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett;
revised version with new reference
Spintronics for electrical measurement of light polarization
The helicity of a circularly polarized light beam may be determined by the
spin direction of photo-excited electrons in a III-V semiconductor. We present
a theoretical demonstration how the direction of the ensuing electron spin
polarization may be determined by electrical means of two
ferromagnet/semiconductor Schottky barriers. The proposed scheme allows for
time-resolved detection of spin accumulation in small structures and may have a
device application.Comment: Revised version, 8 two-column pages, 5 figures; Added: a
comprehensive time dependent analysis, figures 3b-3c & 5, equations 6 & 13-16
and 3 references. submitted to Phys. Rev.
Fractal Characterizations of MAX Statistical Distribution in Genetic Association Studies
Two non-integer parameters are defined for MAX statistics, which are maxima
of simpler test statistics. The first parameter, , is the
fractional number of tests, representing the equivalent numbers of independent
tests in MAX. If the tests are dependent, . The second
parameter is the fractional degrees of freedom of the chi-square
distribution that fits the MAX null distribution. These two
parameters, and , can be independently defined, and can be
non-integer even if is an integer. We illustrate these two parameters
using the example of MAX2 and MAX3 statistics in genetic case-control studies.
We speculate that is related to the amount of ambiguity of the model
inferred by the test. In the case-control genetic association, tests with low
(e.g. ) are able to provide definitive information about the disease
model, as versus tests with high (e.g. ) that are completely uncertain
about the disease model. Similar to Heisenberg's uncertain principle, the
ability to infer disease model and the ability to detect significant
association may not be simultaneously optimized, and seems to measure the
level of their balance
Coherently photo-induced ferromagnetism in diluted magnetic semiconductors
Ferromagnetism is predicted in undoped diluted magnetic semiconductors
illuminated by intense sub-bandgap laser radiation . The mechanism for
photo-induced ferromagnetism is coherence between conduction and valence bands
induced by the light which leads to an optical exchange interaction. The
ferromagnetic critical temperature T_C depends both on the properties of the
material and on the frequency and intensity of the laser and could be above 1
K.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, preprint styl
High multipole transitions in NIXS: valence and hybridization in 4f systems
Momentum-transfer (q) dependent non-resonant inelastic x-ray scattering
measurements were made at the N4,5 edges for several rare earth compounds. With
increasing q, giant dipole resonances diminish, to be replaced by strong
multiplet lines at lower energy transfer. These multiplets result from two
different orders of multipole scattering and are distinct for systems with
simple 4f^0 and 4f^1 initial states. A many-body theoretical treatment of the
multiplets agrees well with the experimental data on ionic La and Ce phosphate
reference compounds. Comparing measurements on CeO2 and CeRh3 to the theory and
the phosphates indicates sensitivity to hybridization as observed by a
broadening of 4f^0-related multiplet features. We expect such strong, nondipole
features to be generic for NIXS from f-electron systems
Electrical expression of spin accumulation in ferromagnet/semiconductor structures
We treat the spin injection and extraction via a ferromagnetic
metal/semiconductor Schottky barrier as a quantum scattering problem. This
enables the theory to explain a number of phenomena involving spin-dependent
current through the Schottky barrier, especially the counter-intuitive spin
polarization direction in the semiconductor due to current extraction seen in
recent experiments. A possible explanation of this phenomenon involves taking
into account the spin-dependent inelastic scattering via the bound states in
the interface region. The quantum-mechanical treatment of spin transport
through the interface is coupled with the semiclassical description of
transport in the adjoining media, in which we take into account the in-plane
spin diffusion along the interface in the planar geometry used in experiments.
The theory forms the basis of the calculation of spin-dependent current flow in
multi-terminal systems, consisting of a semiconductor channel with many
ferromagnetic contacts attached, in which the spin accumulation created by spin
injection/extraction can be efficiently sensed by electrical means. A
three-terminal system can be used as a magnetic memory cell with the bit of
information encoded in the magnetization of one of the contacts. Using five
terminals we construct a reprogrammable logic gate, in which the logic inputs
and the functionality are encoded in magnetizations of the four terminals,
while the current out of the fifth one gives a result of the operation.Comment: A review to appear in Mod. Phys. Lett.
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