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Tom H. Johansen

Bio: Tom H. Johansen is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Superconductivity & Magnetic flux. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 341 publications receiving 6411 citations. Previous affiliations of Tom H. Johansen include Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters & University of Wollongong.


Papers
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TL;DR: Avalanche dynamics are found in many phenomena, from earthquakes to the evolution of species as mentioned in this paper, and they can also be found in vortex matter when a type-II superconductor is externally driven, for example, by an increasing magnetic field.
Abstract: Avalanche dynamics are found in many phenomena, from earthquakes to the evolution of species. They can also be found in vortex matter when a type-II superconductor is externally driven, for example, by an increasing magnetic field. Vortex avalanches associated with thermal instabilities can be an undesirable effect for applications, but ``dynamically driven'' avalanches emerging from the competition between intervortex interactions and quenched disorder may provide an interesting test scenario for nonequilibrium dynamics theory. In contrast to the equilibrium phases of vortex matter in type-II superconductors, the corresponding dynamical phases---in which avalanches can play a role---are only beginning to be studied. This article reviews relevant experiments performed in the last decade or so, emphasizing the ability of different experimental techniques to establish the nature and statistical properties of avalanche behavior.

194 citations

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TL;DR: Results on the behavior of the Bi-doped YIG film with in-plane anisotropy which the authors use as field indicator are presented, explaining why previous measurements of flux density profiles have displayed surprisingly large deviations from the expected behavior.
Abstract: Magneto-optic imaging was used for a detailed study of the flux and current distribution of a long thin strip of ${\mathrm{YBa}}_{2}$${\mathrm{Cu}}_{3}$${\mathrm{O}}_{7\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{\ensuremath{\delta}}}$ placed in a perpendicular external magnetic field. The inverse magnetic problem, i.e., that of deriving from a field map the underlying current distribution, is formulated and solved for the strip geometry. Applying the inversion to the magneto-optically found field map we find on a model-independent basis the current distribution across the strip to be in remarkable agreement with the profile predicted by the Bean model. The paper also presents results on the behavior of the Bi-doped YIG film with in-plane anisotropy which we use as field indicator, explaining why previous measurements of flux density profiles have displayed surprisingly large deviations from the expected behavior. \textcopyright{} 1996 The American Physical Society.

180 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 2002-EPL
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that below 10 K the penetration of magnetic flux in MgB2 films is dominated by dendritic structures abruptly formed in response to an applied field, and that these structures show a temperature-dependent morphology ranging from quasi-1D at 4 K to large tree-like structures near 10 K.
Abstract: Magneto-optical imaging reveal that below 10 K the penetration of magnetic flux in MgB2 films is dominated by dendritic structures abruptly formed in response to an applied field. The dendrites show a temperature-dependent morphology ranging from quasi-1D at 4 K to large tree-like structures near 10 K. This behaviour is responsible for the anomalous noise found in magnetization curves, and strongly suppresses the apparent critical current. The instability is of thermo-magnetic origin, as supported by our simulations of vortex dynamics reproducing the variety of dendritic flux patterns.

176 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the (Ba,K)Fe2As2 single crystals become isotropic at low temperatures and high magnetic fields, resulting in a very rigid vortex lattice, even in fields very close to Hc2.
Abstract: We report that the (Ba,K)Fe2As2 crystal with Tc =3 2 K shows a pinning potential, U0, as high as 104 K, with U0 showing very little field dependence. The (Ba,K)Fe2As2 single crystals become isotropic at low temperatures and high magnetic fields, resulting in a very rigid vortex lattice, even in fields very close to Hc2. The isotropic rigid vortices observed in the two-dimensional (2D) (Ba,K)Fe2As2 distinguish this compound from 2D high-Tc cuprate superconductors with 2D vortices. The vortex avalanches were also observed at low temperatures in the (Ba,K)Fe2As2 crystal. It is proposed that it is the K substitution that induces both almost isotropic superconductivity and the very strong intrinsic pinning in the (Ba,K)Fe2As2 crystal.

168 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, magneto-opitcal studies of a c-oriented epitaxial MgB2 film show that below 10 K the global penetration of vortices is dominated by complex dendritic structures abruptly entering the film.
Abstract: Magneto-opitcal studies of a c-oriented epitaxial MgB2 film show that below 10 K the global penetration of vortices is dominated by complex dendritic structures abruptly entering the film. We suggest that the observed behavior is due to a thermo-magnetic instability which is supported by vortex dynamics simulations. The instability is also responsible for large fluctuations in the magnetization curves in MgB2 at low temperatures.

148 citations


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2,877 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative analysis of the proximity effect in the presence of an exchange field and then a description of the properties of superconductor-ferromagnet heterostructures is provided.
Abstract: The proximity effect at superconductor-ferromagnet interfaces produces damped oscillatory behavior of the Cooper pair wave function within the ferromagnetic medium. This is analogous to the inhomogeneous superconductivity, predicted long ago by Fulde and Ferrell (P. Fulde and R. A. Ferrell, 1964, ``Superconductivity in a strong spin-exchange field,'' Phys. Rev. 135, A550--A563), and by Larkin and Ovchinnikov (A. I. Larkin and Y. N. Ovchinnikov, 1964, ``Inhomogeneous state of superconductors,'' Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz. 47, 1136--1146 [Sov. Phys. JETP 20, 762--769 (1965)]), and sought by condensed-matter experimentalists ever since. This article offers a qualitative analysis of the proximity effect in the presence of an exchange field and then provides a description of the properties of superconductor-ferromagnet heterostructures. Special attention is paid to the striking nonmonotonic dependence of the critical temperature of multilayers and bilayers on the ferromagnetic layer thickness as well as to the conditions under which ``$\ensuremath{\pi}$'' Josephson junctions are realized. Recent progress in the preparation of high-quality hybrid systems has permitted the observation of many interesting experimental effects, which are also discussed. Finally, the author analyzes the phenomenon of domain-wall superconductivity and the influence of superconductivity on the magnetic structure in superconductor-ferromagnet bilayers.

1,626 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the constructive role of Brownian motion is exemplified for various physical and technological setups, which are inspired by the cellular molecular machinery: the working principles and characteristics of stylized devices are discussed to show how fluctuations, either thermal or extrinsic, can be used to control diffusive particle transport.
Abstract: In systems possessing spatial or dynamical symmetry breaking, Brownian motion combined with unbiased external input signals, deterministic and random alike, can assist directed motion of particles at submicron scales. In such cases, one speaks of ``Brownian motors.'' In this review the constructive role of Brownian motion is exemplified for various physical and technological setups, which are inspired by the cellular molecular machinery: the working principles and characteristics of stylized devices are discussed to show how fluctuations, either thermal or extrinsic, can be used to control diffusive particle transport. Recent experimental demonstrations of this concept are surveyed with particular attention to transport in artificial, i.e., nonbiological, nanopores, lithographic tracks, and optical traps, where single-particle currents were first measured. Much emphasis is given to two- and three-dimensional devices containing many interacting particles of one or more species; for this class of artificial motors, noise rectification results also from the interplay of particle Brownian motion and geometric constraints. Recently, selective control and optimization of the transport of interacting colloidal particles and magnetic vortices have been successfully achieved, thus leading to the new generation of microfluidic and superconducting devices presented here. The field has recently been enriched with impressive experimental achievements in building artificial Brownian motor devices that even operate within the quantum domain by harvesting quantum Brownian motion. Sundry akin topics include activities aimed at noise-assisted shuttling other degrees of freedom such as charge, spin, or even heat and the assembly of chemical synthetic molecular motors. This review ends with a perspective for future pathways and potential new applications.

1,319 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the current carrying capacity and reliability of multiwalled carbon nanotubes under high current densities (>109 A/cm2) were investigated and shown that no observable failure in the nanotube structure and no measurable change in the resistance are detected at temperatures up to 250 ˚C and for time scales up to 2 weeks.
Abstract: The current-carrying capacity and reliability studies of multiwalled carbon nanotubes under high current densities (>109 A/cm2) show that no observable failure in the nanotube structure and no measurable change in the resistance are detected at temperatures up to 250 °C and for time scales up to 2 weeks. Our results suggest that nanotubes are potential candidates as interconnects in future large-scale integrated nanoelectronic devices.

1,229 citations