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Weird "Particles" Spotted in Hot New Material
ScienceNOW Daily News ^ | 14 October 2009 | Adrian Cho

Posted on 10/15/2009 11:36:01 PM PDT by neverdem

In the past 5 years, no material has excited more interest from condensed matter physicists than graphene, a sheet of carbon only one atom thick. Electrons zing through the stuff in an unusual way, and they flow so easily that graphene could someday replace silicon and other semiconductors as the material of choice for microchips. Now, a team of physicists has taken a key step in fulfilling graphene's promise as a hotbed of exotic physics by showing that the electrons within it can team up to behave like particles with a fraction of the electron's charge.

The effect is called the fractional quantum Hall effect, and it's an esoteric embellishment of an already esoteric phenomenon known as the Hall effect. Discovered in 1879, the Hall effect works like this: Suppose you take a horizontal bar of metal and apply a voltage from one end to the other. A current will run down the length of the bar. If you then apply a strong vertical magnetic field, the flowing electrons will experience a sideways shove that will cause them to crowd to the side of the bar as they go so that a voltage develops across the width of the bar too. Sideways Hall voltage increases in proportion to the strength of the magnetic field.

Things get weirder if the bar is made of semiconductor and is extremely thin top to bottom. In that case, the electrons can flow in only a few quantum channels that close one by one as the magnetic field increases. The Hall voltage climbs as the magnetic field increases in a series of even steps whose spacing is set by the electron's charge. The discovery of that quantum Hall effect won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1985. Weirder still, if the slab of semiconductor is made very pure and cold, then the electrons can gang up to act like "quasiparticles" with fractional charges--say, 1/3 of an electron's charge--adding more steps to the Hall-voltage stairway. That's the fractional quantum Hall effect, which bagged a Nobel in 1988.

The fractional effect is a sign of very strong interactions among the electrons, a condition that can lead to a variety of surprising phenomena and which marks the conceptual frontier in condensed matter physics. Many physicists had hoped to see the fractional effect in graphene as proof that it would be an especially fruitful material to study. But they couldn't be entirely sure it would appear. Because of the arrangement of the atoms in graphene, the electrons zip through less like ordinary massive particles that can stop and start and more like massless and always-moving particles of light. Nobody was sure such "relativistic" electrons would interact strongly enough to produce the effect, though several groups had looked for it. "It was the biggest disappointment in this really hot field, that it hadn't been seen," says Eva Andrei of Rutgers University in Piscataway, New Jersey.

Fret no more, physicists. Andrei and her team have finally spotted electrons in graphene getting together in the right way. To do it, the team suspended micrometer-sized bits of graphene to avoid interference from the underlying substrate. The researchers then used a special arrangement of electrodes to keep from shorting out their own measurements, they report online this week in Nature. They observed quasiparticles with 1/3 an electron's charge. In fact, Andrei says, the researchers saw the effect at higher temperatures and lower magnetic fields than are needed to see it in semiconductors, suggesting that the electrons in graphene interact especially strongly.

"It's absolutely convincing," says physicist Kostya Novoselov of the University of Manchester, U.K. "It definitely proves it's reasonable to study electron-electron interactions in graphene." Andrei says now that physicists have spotted this effect, they may see electrons in graphene joining together in completely new and even weirder ways. And if researchers can produce quasiparticles with charge 5/2, then in principle they could make a type of quantum computer that would work by braiding the particles' paths together.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Testing
KEYWORDS: fqhe; graphene; halleffect; physics; quantumcomputer; quantumcomputers; stringtheory
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1 posted on 10/15/2009 11:36:02 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

BTTT.


2 posted on 10/15/2009 11:37:07 PM PDT by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: neverdem
So much for the mathematicians. These hypotheses, according to some people, underestimated the resources of the human mind; they bowed to the unknown, proclaiming the ancient doctine, arrogantly resurrected, of ignoramus et ignorabimus. Others regarded the mathematicians' hypotheses as sterile and dangerous nonsense, contributing towards the creation of a modern mythology based on the notion of this giant brain - whether plasmic or electronic was immaterial - as the ultimate objective of existence, the very synthesis of life.

Solaris, by Stanislav Lem

3 posted on 10/16/2009 12:03:03 AM PDT by dr_lew
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To: neverdem

I recall when a 6 transistor portable AM radio was a biggy.


4 posted on 10/16/2009 12:18:59 AM PDT by Westlander (Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
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To: Westlander

Hell, I remember going with my dad to buy tubes for the radio! That was back in the fifties.


5 posted on 10/16/2009 12:47:14 AM PDT by SatinDoll (NO Foreign Nationals as our President!!)
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To: Westlander
"I recall when a 6 transistor portable AM radio was a biggy."

Yeah, I also remember when the number of transistors was marketed as an indicator of a pocket radio's "quality" and/or "power". The funny thing is that soon, "Six-Transistor" radios ("Made in Japan") were common -- but they were the same old two-transistor circuits -- with four empty or non-functional transistor "cans" installed to up the visual count (and the price)...

6 posted on 10/16/2009 12:53:04 AM PDT by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: Westlander
"I recall when a 6 transistor portable AM radio was a biggy."

Yeah, I also remember when the number of transistors was marketed as an indicator of a pocket radio's "quality" and/or "power". The funny thing is that soon, "Six-Transistor" radios ("Made in Japan") were common -- but they were the same old two-transistor circuits -- with four empty or non-functional transistor "cans" installed to up the visual count (and the price)...

7 posted on 10/16/2009 12:54:04 AM PDT by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: TXnMA

The other four posts of that comment are fakes... ‘-)


8 posted on 10/16/2009 12:55:29 AM PDT by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: Westlander

Known as a “Transistor” or a “Sony”. I had one, an actual Sony, smaller than a pack of cards, and with a speaker that covered the front. Powered by a 9V battery, you could see the guts if you undid a screw on the back cover. It was crammed full. It came with an earplug and jack, much as we still see today. I remember listening to “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” on it, which dates it to 1961.


9 posted on 10/16/2009 12:55:48 AM PDT by dr_lew
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To: SatinDoll
Recall the 'tube testing machine' stores would have? The add on box to get maybe one UHF channel on your solid wood cabinet VHF b/w tv? The multi color plastic film you'd tape to your tube to make it look like color? And we survived.


10 posted on 10/16/2009 1:06:38 AM PDT by Westlander (Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
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To: Westlander

My parents didn’t buy a TV - then it was black and white - until 1957. Yes, I remember the tube testers. And my grandfather had one of the first color televisions made, I beleive it was by Motorola.

Grandpa liked to watch baseball on TV. The fields and areas inside the diamonds were, well, sort of green. It wasn’t until 1960 that TVs really captured green all that well!


11 posted on 10/16/2009 1:13:21 AM PDT by SatinDoll (NO Foreign Nationals as our President!!)
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To: Westlander

RE: colored film

As kids we used to watch a program called Rinky Dink
that was probably the first example of interactive media,
you could send off and get a plastic film that you’d
put over the screen and then using some kind of grease
pencil you could play games on the program like connect
the dots, word games, etc.

Yes, I’m older than saran wrap.


12 posted on 10/16/2009 3:13:43 AM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: SatinDoll
I remember when my Dad and I used two tin cans with a string between them to communicate. :-)
13 posted on 10/16/2009 4:39:39 AM PDT by mosaicwolf (Strength and Honor)
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To: neverdem

Over the past few years, graphene has been pretty danged popular as the topic of FR topics. :’)


14 posted on 10/16/2009 4:47:07 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: AdmSmith; bvw; callisto; ckilmer; dandelion; ganeshpuri89; gobucks; KevinDavis; Las Vegas Dave; ...
...a team of physicists has taken a key step in fulfilling graphene's promise as a hotbed of exotic physics by showing that the electrons within it can team up to behave like particles with a fraction of the electron's charge. The effect is called the fractional quantum Hall effect, and it's an esoteric embellishment of an already esoteric phenomenon known as the Hall effect.
The Hall effect was what led to the breakup, and obscurity for Oates as well as Hall. Thanks neverdem.

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15 posted on 10/16/2009 4:49:18 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: SunkenCiv

Ah, so that’s why it’s called the quantum Hall effect ... the missing Oates.


16 posted on 10/16/2009 4:53:18 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Dems, believing they cannot be deceived, it is impossible to convince them when they are deceived.)
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To: neverdem

I dunno about this quantum computing thingy. I mean, when the Captain sticks his head in my cube and shouts “Ensign Drill, are the deflector shields up?” I’m gonna want to be able to answer something better than, “Probably, boss.”


17 posted on 10/16/2009 4:57:29 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: neverdem

What is the temperature range here?


18 posted on 10/16/2009 5:00:02 PM PDT by allmost
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To: MHGinTN

This whole graphene study could wind up being a nasty kick in the Cooper pairs.


19 posted on 10/16/2009 5:32:05 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: SunkenCiv

Can you help me out here? what temperature, specific. This ultra low temp crap is wearing thin.


20 posted on 10/16/2009 9:25:27 PM PDT by allmost
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