New analytical software developed.
The Numerical Algorithms Group (NAG) have announced that its
numerical components have played an integral part in new analytical
software developed by a Professor at the University of Oxford. The
original impetus for developing the new analytical software application
came from the availability of new experimental probes for studying
magnetism. Neutron spectroscopy, in particular, has become a very
powerful probe of the magnetic state of atoms thanks largely to advances
in instrumentation at spallation neutron sources like the ISIS Facility
at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. This technique makes it possible
to obtain accurate measurements of level splittings in atoms caused by
interactions with the crystalline environment. Detailed information on
the many-electron states of atoms can be obtained from these level
splittings and the corresponding spectral intensities.
Experiments that determine the electronic state of atoms in
magnetic substances are extremely valuable for understanding the origin
of magnetic behaviour and for engineering materials with new or improved
magnetic properties. Armed with extensive experimental data, Professor
Andrew Boothroyd, at the University of Oxford Physics Department, needed
the analytical tools to work out the state of the electrons and hence
understand their magnetic behaviour.
The creation of SPECTRE--the system designed to undertake the data
analysis--and its subsequent evolution took place over many years as
specific problems arose during the course of the research. SPECTRE uses
the most up-to-date atomic models, which makes the results very accurate
and quantitative. In brief, it calculates the neutron spectra in terms
of a small number of unknown parameters, and determines these parameters
by least-squares fitting to the data. The core of the calculation is a
series of matrix diagonalizations carried out by NAG routines designed
to handle Hermitian matrices. The least-squares fitting is also
performed by NAG routines. The lowest energy eigenfunctions found by the
program are used to calculate other experimentally accessible physical
properties such as the magnetic susceptibility and specific heat
capacity. SPECTRE will be made freely available to other magnetic
materials groups in the hope that it will make it easier for scientists
to interpret neutron spectroscopy data and thereby contribute towards
the improvement of magnet materials.
www.nag.co.uk
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