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Quantum tunneling, magnetization dependence

For the partially deuterated benzoic acid (C6D5COOH), the solid state H NMR spectrum is dominated by the intra-dimer H- H dipole-dipole interaction. In a single crystal, both tautomers A and B are characterised by a well-defined interproton vector with respect to the direction of the magnetic field (Fig. 1). Proton motion modulates the H- H dipole-dipole interactions, which in turn affects the H NMR lineshape and the spin-lattice relaxation time. It has been shown that spin-lattice relaxation times are sensitive to the proton dynamics over the temperature range from 10 K to 300 K, and at low temperatures incoherent quantum tunnelling characterises the proton dynamics. A dipolar splitting of about 16 kHz is observed at 20 K. From the orientation dependence of the dipolar splitting, the... [Pg.4]

Results in favor of the existence of macroscopic quantum tunneling of the magnetization were also reported by means of low-temperature measurements of the frequency-dependent magnetic noise S co) and... [Pg.464]

A schematic view of the nanomechanical GMR device to be considered is presented in Fig. 1. Two fully spin-polarized magnets with fully spin-polarized electrons serve as source and drain electrodes in a tunneling device. In this paper we will consider the situation when the electrodes have exactly opposite polarization. A mechanically movable quantum dot (described by a time-dependent displacement x(t)), where a single energy level is available for electrons, performs forced harmonic oscillations with period T = 2-k/uj between the leads. The external magnetic field is perpendicular to the orientation of the magnetization in both leads. [Pg.310]

Josephson110 Effect. If two superconductors are separated by a thin layer (<3 nm for an insulator, several micrometers for a metal), then both a DC Josephson effect and an AC Josephson effect can occur. In the DC Josephson effect, a supercurrent can bridge the layer by quantum-mechanical tunneling, but there is a change in phase, which can be detected. It is very sensitive to magnetic fields indeed the supercurrent has the form f = f0 sin (O/O0)/ 7i(/0), where I0 depends on the temperature and the structure of the junction. If a DC potential V is applied across a Josephson junction, then the AC Josephson effect creates a response at a frequency... [Pg.496]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.461 ]




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