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GdFe₀.₅Cr₀.₅O₃ (GFCO) is a single-phase magnetoelectric multiferroic at temperatures close to ambient. Epitaxial thin films of this orthorhombic perovskite would offer the possibility of tuning its electrical and magnetic properties through control of strain and interface effects. Here, 200 nm thick GFCO thin films have been grown on (001) SrTiO3 substrates by solution synthesis and the microstructures have been investigated by cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. The GFCO films are epitaxial but exhibit a mixture of three different orientation relationships in the form of domains ≈50 nm in diameter. Geometric analyses of the lattice matching show that the misfits for these domains would be tensile with magnitudes of less than 2 %. Pockets of a SrCrO4 reaction product form at the film/substrate interface and do not exhibit any simple orientation with the adjacent phases. The product morphology indicates that the outward diffusion of Sr is more rapid than the inward diffusion of Cr, and this is related to the microstructures of the surrounding phases. These data show that epitaxial films of GFCO can be obtained via this route, but careful control of process parameters would be required to produce single-domain films, and alternate substrates or buffer layers would be needed to inhibit SrCrO4 formation.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 4, 2026
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Abstract We report the observation of gravitational waves from two binary black hole coalescences during the fourth observing run of the LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA detector network, GW241011 and GW241110. The sources of these two signals are characterized by rapid and precisely measured primary spins, nonnegligible spin–orbit misalignment, and unequal mass ratios between their constituent black holes. These properties are characteristic of binaries in which the more massive object was itself formed from a previous binary black hole merger and suggest that the sources of GW241011 and GW241110 may have formed in dense stellar environments in which repeated mergers can take place. As the third-loudest gravitational-wave event published to date, with a median network signal-to-noise ratio of 36.0, GW241011 furthermore yields stringent constraints on the Kerr nature of black holes, the multipolar structure of gravitational-wave generation, and the existence of ultralight bosons within the mass range 10−13–10−12eV.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available October 28, 2026
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Abstract On 2023 November 23, the two LIGO observatories both detected GW231123, a gravitational-wave signal consistent with the merger of two black holes with masses and (90% credible intervals), at a luminosity distance of 0.7–4.1 Gpc, a redshift of , and with a network signal-to-noise ratio of ∼20.7. Both black holes exhibit high spins— and , respectively. A massive black hole remnant is supported by an independent ringdown analysis. Some properties of GW231123 are subject to large systematic uncertainties, as indicated by differences in the inferred parameters between signal models. The primary black hole lies within or above the theorized mass gap where black holes between 60–130M⊙should be rare, due to pair-instability mechanisms, while the secondary spans the gap. The observation of GW231123 therefore suggests the formation of black holes from channels beyond standard stellar collapse and that intermediate-mass black holes of mass ∼200M⊙form through gravitational-wave-driven mergers.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available October 27, 2026
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The gravitational-wave signal GW250114 was observed by the two LIGO detectors with a network matched-filter signal-to-noise ratio of 80. The signal was emitted by the coalescence of two black holes with near-equal masses and , and small spins (90% credibility) and negligible eccentricity . Postmerger data excluding the peak region are consistent with the dominant quadrupolar mode of a Kerr black hole and its first overtone. We constrain the modes’ frequencies to of the Kerr spectrum, providing a test of the remnant’s Kerr nature. We also examine Hawking’s area law, also known as the second law of black hole mechanics, which states that the total area of the black hole event horizons cannot decrease with time. A range of analyses that exclude up to five of the strongest merger cycles confirm that the remnant area is larger than the sum of the initial areas to high credibility.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
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