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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 90(11): 116601, 2003 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12688949

ABSTRACT

We investigate the behavior of the Hall coefficient in the case of antiferromagnetism driven by Fermi-surface nesting, and find that the Hall coefficient should abruptly increase with the onset of magnetism, as recently observed in vanadium doped chromium. This effect is due to the sudden removal of flat portions of the Fermi surface upon magnetic ordering. Within this picture, the Hall coefficient should scale as the square of the residual resistivity divided by the impurity concentration, which is consistent with available data.

2.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 65(3 Pt 2B): 036401, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11909256

ABSTRACT

The analysis of a one-dimensional two-fluid hydrodynamic model with relativistic electrons and nonrelativistic ions shows that the propagation of a nonlinear plasma wave is accompanied by a steady currentless plasma drift. Ions, due to their larger mass, appear to be the main carriers of the average momentum of the plasma wave. Two examples of nonlinear plasma waves generated by moving sources (short laser pulses and electron bunches) are analyzed to show details of the energy and momentum conservation laws.

3.
Nature ; 407(6802): 351-5, 2000 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11014185

ABSTRACT

There are two main theoretical descriptions of antiferromagnets. The first arises from atomic physics, which predicts that atoms with unpaired electrons develop magnetic moments. In a solid, the coupling between moments on nearby ions then yields antiferromagnetic order at low temperatures. The second description, based on the physics of electron fluids or 'Fermi liquids' states that Coulomb interactions can drive the fluid to adopt a more stable configuration by developing a spin density wave. It is at present unknown which view is appropriate at a 'quantum critical point' where the antiferromagnetic transition temperature vanishes. Here we report neutron scattering and bulk magnetometry measurements of the metal CeCu(6-x)Au(x), which allow us to discriminate between the two models. We find evidence for an atomically local contribution to the magnetic correlations which develops at the critical gold concentration (x(c) = 0.1), corresponding to a magnetic ordering temperature of zero. This contribution implies that a Fermi-liquid-destroying spin-localizing transition, unanticipated from the spin density wave description, coincides with the antiferromagnetic quantum critical point.

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