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Scientists Discover a 'Tuneable' Novel Quantum State of Matter (phys.org)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Phys.Org: An international team of researchers led by Princeton physicist Zahid Hasan has discovered a quantum state of matter that can be "tuned" at will -- and it's 10 times more tuneable than existing theories can explain. This level of manipulability opens enormous possibilities for next-generation nanotechnologies and quantum computing. Hasan and his colleagues, whose research appears in the current issue of Nature, are calling their discovery a "novel" quantum state of matter because it is not explained by existing theories of material properties. The classical phases of matter -- solids, liquids and gases -- arise from interactions between atoms or molecules. In a quantum phase of matter, the interactions take place between electrons, and are much more complex.

[Hasan] and his colleagues arranged atoms on the surface of crystals in many different patterns and watched what happened. They used various materials prepared by collaborating groups in China, Taiwan and Princeton. One particular arrangement, a six-fold honeycomb shape called a "kagome lattice" for its resemblance to a Japanese basket-weaving pattern, led to something startling -- but only when examined under a spectromicroscope in the presence of a strong magnetic field [...]. All the known theories of physics predicted that the electrons would adhere to the six-fold underlying pattern, but instead, the electrons hovering above their atoms decided to march to their own drummer -- in a straight line, with two-fold symmetry. The decoupling between the electrons and the arrangement of atoms was surprising enough, but then the researchers applied a magnetic field and discovered that they could turn that one line in any direction they chose. Without moving the crystal lattice, [one] could rotate the line of electrons just by controlling the magnetic field around them.

4 of 82 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Sounds more classical than quantum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are five. You forgot Bose-Einstein condensate.

  2. ALERT by TimMD909 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Anyone who shitposts on this... is a turd winkle. This is news. This is nerdy. This matters to me.

    I'll throw the worst of shrubberies with plenty of typoeees at anyone who disobeys this edict.

  3. Re:Can someone with a lab... by SqueakyMouse · · Score: 3, Informative

    Light takes many routes through the glass, bouncing off the many obstacles. What your eye sees is the route of maximal constructive interference. If you remove the sides of the glass, then the interference pattern is not the same. As far as you know, I'm just a random guy on the internet of course, so do double check everything I just said.

  4. Re:"That's funny" by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Religion discovers new..."

    Fun fact: Historically, the Catholic Church has been a major sponsor of astronomy. Catholic Church backed and help make plenty of scientific discoveries. They have had poor reactions to some discoveries but contributed a lot to making them.

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    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.