1,340 research outputs found
High resolution miniature dilatometer based on AFM piezocantilever
Thermal expansion, or dilation, is closely related to the specific heat, and
provides useful information regarding material properties. The accurate
measurement of dilation in confined spaces coupled with other limiting
experimental environments such as low temperatures and rapidly changing high
magnetic fields requires a new sensitive millimeter size dilatometer that has
little or no temperature and field dependence. We have designed an ultra
compact dilatometer using an atomic force microscope (AFM) piezoresistive
cantilever as the sensing element and demonstrated its versatility by studying
the charge density waves (CDWs) in alpha uranium to high magnetic fields (up to
31 T). The performance of this piezoresistive dilatometer was comparable to
that of a titanium capacitive dilatometer.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Review of Scientific Instrument
High-magnetic field lattice length changes in URu2Si2
We report high magnetic field (up to 45 T) c-axis thermal expansion and
magnetostriction experiments on URu2Si2 single crystals. The sample length
change associated with the transition to the hidden order phase becomes
increasingly discontinous as the magnetic field is raised above 25 T. The
re-entrant ordered phase III is clearly observed in both the thermal expansion
and magnetostriction above 36 T, in good agreement with previous results. The
sample length is also discontinuous at the boundaries of this phase, mainly at
the upper boundary. A change in the sign of the coefficient of
thermal-expansion is observed at the metamagnetic transition (B_M = 38 T) which
is likely related to the existence of a quantum critical end point.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in PR
Photoelectron spectra of aluminum cluster anions: Temperature effects and ab initio simulations
Photoelectron (PES) spectra from aluminum cluster anions (from 12 to 15
atoms) at various temperature regimes, were studied using ab-initio molecular
dynamics simulations and experimentally. The calculated PES spectra, obtained
via shifting of the simulated electronic densities of states by the
self-consistently determined values of the asymptotic exchange-correlation
potential, agree well with the measured ones, allowing reliable structural
assignments and theoretical estimation of the clusters' temperatures.Comment: RevTex, 3 gif figures. Scheduled for Oct 15, 1999, issue of Phys.
Rev. B as Rapid Communicatio
Recommended from our members
Topological analysis of the vasculature of angiopoietin-expressing tumours through scale-space tracing
This work describes the topological analysis of the vasculature of tumours. The analysis is performed with a scale-space technique, which traces the centrelines of vessels as topological ridges of the image intensities and then obtains a series of measurements, which are used to compare the vasculatures. Besides the measurements directly associated with the centrelines, the scales obtained allow the estimation of width andthusareacoveredwithvessels. Tumours of SW1222 human colorectal carcinoma xenografts were observed when growing in dorsal skin-fold window chambers in mice. Three variants of the tumours expressing either endogenous levels of angiopoietins (WT) or over-expressing either angiopoietin-1 (Ang-1) or angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) were assessed with/without vascular targeted therapy. The scale-space technique was able to discriminate between the vasculatures of the three different tumour types prior to treatment. Results also suggested that over-expression of Ang-2 was associated with susceptibility of the tumour vasculature to the vascular disrupting agent, combretastatin A4 phosphate (CA4P). Substantiation of this finding would point to the potential of tumour Ang-2 expression as a predictive bio-marker for response to CA4P
Magnetic field induced lattice anomaly inside the superconducting state of CeCoIn: evidence of the proposed Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov state
We report high magnetic field linear magnetostriction experiments on
CeCoIn single crystals. Two features are remarkable: (i) a sharp
discontinuity in all the crystallographic axes associated with the upper
superconducting critical field that becomes less pronounced as the
temperature increases; (ii) a distinctive second order-like feature observed
only along the c-axis in the high field (10 T ) low
temperature ( 0.35 K) region. This second order transition is
observed only when the magnetic field lies within 20 of the ab-planes and
there is no signature of it above , which raises questions regarding
its interpretation as a field induced magnetically ordered phase. Good
agreement with previous results suggests that this anomaly is related to the
transition to the Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov superconducting state.Comment: 3 figures, 5 page
Two dimensional Dirac fermions and quantum magnetoresistance in CaMnBi
We report two dimensional Dirac fermions and quantum magnetoresistance in
single crystals of CaMnBi. The non-zero Berry's phase, small cyclotron
resonant mass and first-principle band structure suggest the existence of the
Dirac fermions in the Bi square nets. The in-plane transverse magnetoresistance
exhibits a crossover at a critical field from semiclassical weak-field
dependence to the high-field unsaturated linear magnetoresistance ( in 9 T at 2 K) due to the quantum limit of the Dirac fermions. The
temperature dependence of satisfies quadratic behavior, which is
attributed to the splitting of linear energy dispersion in high field. Our
results demonstrate the existence of two dimensional Dirac fermions in
CaMnBi with Bi square nets.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
- …
