Compression for data archiving and backup revisited
Corneliu Constantinescu
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2009
We have studied the approach to magnetic saturation in sputtered amorphous films by superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometry. We observe a 1H law for the deviation M from complete saturation. The effect is an order of magnitude smaller than earlier results on liquid-quenched ribbons. We show that the effect cannot be due to surface roughness or macroscopic anisotropy. We attribute the behavior to magnetoelastic anisotropy arising from linear defects of a quasidislocation or cylindrical-volume-defect type, running perpendicular to the film plane. We deduce a defect density order 1015 m-2 and effective Burgers vector of order 3 in an as-grown Fe-Ni-B film. We also show how this method can be used to determine the microscopic spatially uncorrelated anisotropy, and we set an upper limit of order 106 J/m2 in the Fe-Ni-B film. © 1984 The American Physical Society.
Corneliu Constantinescu
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2009
Q.R. Huang, Ho-Cheol Kim, et al.
Macromolecules
R.D. Murphy, R.O. Watts
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
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Macromolecules