7,727 research outputs found
Chern number spins of Mn acceptor magnets in GaAs
We determine the effective total spin of local moments formed from
acceptor states bound to Mn ions in GaAs by evaluating their magnetic Chern
numbers. We find that when individual Mn atoms are close to the sample surface,
the total spin changes from to , due to quenching of the
acceptor orbital moment. For Mn pairs in bulk, the total depends on the
pair orientation in the GaAs lattice and on the separation between the Mn
atoms. We point out that Berry curvature variation as a function of local
moment orientation can profoundly influence the quantum spin dynamics of these
magnetic entities.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic properties of substitutional Mn in (110) GaAs surface and subsurface layers
Motivated by recent STM experiments, we present a theoretical study of the
electronic and magnetic properties of the Mn-induced acceptor level obtained by
substituting a single Ga atom in the (110) surface layer of GaAs or in one of
the atoms layers below the surface. We employ a kinetic-exchange tight-binding
model in which the relaxation of the (110) surface is taken into account. The
acceptor wave function is strongly anisotropic in space and its detailed
features depend on the depth of the sublayer in which the Mn atom is located.
The local-density-of-states (LDOS) on the (110) surface associated with the
acceptor level is more sensitive to the direction of the Mn magnetic moment
when the Mn atom is located further below the surface. We show that the total
magnetic anisotropy energy of the system is due almost entirely to the
dependence of the acceptor level energy on Mn spin orientation, and that this
quantity is strongly dependent on the depth of the Mn atom.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure
Priorities for sustainable turfgrass management: a research and industry perspective
This paper provides a brief review and assessment of the key environmental, regulatory and technical issues facing the turfgrass sector with specific reference to the European context. It considers the range of externalities or ‘drivers for change' facing the industry, and the challenges and opportunities available for promoting and achieving more sustainable turfgrass management within the sports, landscape and amenity sectors. The analysis confirms that there are a number of key areas where a concerted research and industrial effort is required. These include responding to the pressures from government demands for greater environmental regulation, the increasing pressure on natural resources (notably water, energy and land), the emerging role of turf management in supporting ecosystem services and enhancing biodiversity, the continued need to promote integrated pest management, and the looming challenges posed by a changing climate, and urgent need to adapt. Whilst many of these externalities appear to be risks to the sports turf industry, there will also be significant opportunities, for those where the labour, energy and agronomic costs are minimized and where the drive to adopt a multifunctional approach to sportsturf management is embraced
Magnetic interactions of substitutional Mn pairs in GaAs
We employ a kinetic-exchange tight-binding model to calculate the magnetic
interaction and anisotropy energies of a pair of substitutional Mn atoms in
GaAs as a function of their separation distance and direction. We find that the
most energetically stable configuration is usually one in which the spins are
ferromagnetically aligned along the vector connecting the Mn atoms. The
ferromagnetic configuration is characterized by a splitting of the topmost
unoccupied acceptor levels, which is visible in scanning tunneling microscope
studies when the pair is close to the surface and is strongly dependent on pair
orientation. The largest acceptor splittings occur when the Mn pair is oriented
along the symmetry direction, and the smallest when they are oriented
along . We show explicitly that the acceptor splitting is not simply
related to the effective exchange interaction between the Mn local moments. The
exchange interaction constant is instead more directly related to the width of
the distribution of all impurity levels -- occupied and unoccupied. When the Mn
pair is at the (110) GaAs surface, both acceptor splitting and effective
exchange interaction are very small except for the smallest possible Mn
separation.Comment: 25 figure
Microwave Spectroscopy
Contains reports on two research projects.Lincoln Laboratory, Purchase Order DDL BB-107U. S. Air Force under Contract AF 19(628)-50
Elastic Compton Scattering from 3He and the Role of the Delta
We report observables for elastic Compton scattering from He in Chiral
Effective Field Theory with an explicit degree of freedom
(EFT) for energies between 50 and 120 MeV. The He amplitude
is complete at N3LO, , and in general converges well
order by order. It includes the dominant pion-loop and two-body currents, as
well as the Delta excitation in the single-nucleon amplitude. Since the cross
section is two to three times that for deuterium and the spin of polarised
He is predominantly carried by its constituent neutron, elastic Compton
scattering promises information on both the scalar and spin polarisabilities of
the neutron. We study in detail the sensitivities of 4 observables to the
neutron polarisabilities: the cross section, the beam asymmetry and two double
asymmetries resulting from circularly polarised photons and a longitudinally or
transversely polarised target. Including the Delta enhances those asymmetries
from which neutron spin polarisabilities could be extracted. We also correct
previous, erroneous results at N2LO, i.e.~without an explicit Delta, and
compare to the same observables on proton, neutron and deuterium targets. An
interactive Mathematica notebook of our results is available from
[email protected]: 37 pages LaTeX2e (pdflatex) including 16 figures as .pdf files using
includegraphics; minor corrections, triggered by referee comments, plus
typographical errors; text-identical to version published as EPJA 54 (2018)
12
Microwave Spectroscopy
Contains reports on three research projects.Signal Corps Contract DA36-039-sc-7489
Magnetic Anisotropy of Isolated Cobalt Nanoplatelets
Motivated in part by experiments performed by M.H. Pan et al. (nanoletters,
v.5, p 83, 2005), we have undertaken a theoretical study of the the magnetic
properties of two-monolayer thick Co nanoplatelets with an equilateral
triangular shape. The analysis is carried out using a microscopic Slater-Koster
tight-binding model with atomic exchange and spin-orbit interactions designed
to realistically capture the salient magnetic features of large nanoclusters
containing up to 350 atoms. Two different truncations of the FCC lattice are
studied, in which the nanoplatelet surface is aligned parallel to the FCC (111)
and (001)crystal planes respectively. We find that the higher coordination
number in the (111) truncated crystal is more likely to reproduce the
perpendicular easy direction found in experiment. Qualitatively, the most
important parameter governing the anisotropy of the model is found to be the
value of the intra-atomic exchange integral J. If we set the value of J near
the bulk value in order to reproduce the experimentally observed magnitude of
the magnetic moments, we find both quasi-easy-planes and perpendicular easy
directions. At larger values of J we find that the easy-axis of magnetization
is perpendicular to the surface, and the value of the magnetic anisotropy
energy per atom is larger. The possible role of hybridization with substrate
surface states in the experimental systems is discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
Measurements of proton induced reaction cross sections on 120Te for the astrophysical p-process
The total cross sections for the 120Te(p,gamma)121I and 120Te(p,n)120I
reactions have been measured by the activation method in the effective
center-of-mass energies between 2.47 MeV and 7.93 MeV. The targets were
prepared by evaporation of 99.4 % isotopically enriched 120Te on Aluminum and
Carbon backing foils, and bombarded with proton beams provided by the FN tandem
accelerator at the University of Notre Dame. The cross sections and factors
were deduced from the observed gamma ray activity, which was detected off-line
by two Clover HPGe detectors mounted in close geometry. The results are
presented and compared with the predictions of statistical model calculations
using the codes NON-SMOKER and TALYS.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, 5 tables, regular articl
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