We uncover a novel phenomenon from a recent artificial light-harvesting experiment [P.-Z. Chen et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Bull (Beijing)
August 2018
Macroscopic realism is the name for a class of modifications to quantum theory that allow macroscopic objects to be described in a measurement-independent manner, while largely preserving a fully quantum mechanical description of the microscopic world. Objective collapse theories are examples which aim to solve the quantum measurement problem through modified dynamical laws. Whether such theories describe nature, however, is not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFollowing a brief review of the "two-level (tunneling) systems" model of the low-temperature properties of amorphous solids ("glasses"), we ask whether it is in fact the unique explanation of these properties as is usually assumed, concluding that this is not necessarily the case. We point out that (a) one specific form of the model is already experimentally refuted and (b) that a definitive test of the model in its most general form, while not yet carried out, would appear to be now experimentally feasible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe extend the Mermin-Wagner theorem to a system of lattice spins which are spin coupled to itinerant and interacting charge carriers. We use the Bogoliubov inequality to rigorously prove that neither (anti-) ferromagnetic nor helical long-range order is possible in one and two dimensions at any finite temperature. Our proof applies to a wide class of models including any form of electron-electron and single-electron interactions that are independent of spin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a variational analysis for a half-quantum vortex (HQV) in the equal-spin-pairing superfluid state which, under suitable conditions, is believed to be realized in Sr(2)RuO(4) and (3)He-A. Our approach is based on a description of the HQV in terms of a BCS-like wave function with a spin-dependent boost. We predict a novel feature: the HQV, if stable, should be accompanied by a nonzero spin polarization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe element helium comes in two (stable) forms, 4He and 3He; at low temperatures and pressures both form liquids rather than solids. The liquid phase of the common isotope, 4He, was realized nearly a century ago, and since 1938 has been known to show, at temperatures below about 2K, the property of superfluidity--the ability to flow through the narrowest capillaries without apparent friction. The light isotope, 3He, is believed to be of quite a different nature; however, because of its similarity to the electrons in metals, which at low temperatures sometimes form "Cooper pairs" and thereby become superconducting, theorists in the 1960s and early 1970s had speculated that something similar might happen in liquid 3He, which would then also show superfluidity though for reasons rather different than 4He.
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