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Nature Physics
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Nature Physics publishes papers of the highest quality and significance in all areas of physics, pure and applied. The journal content reflects core physics disciplines, but is also open to a broad range of topics whose central theme falls within the bounds of physics. Theoretical physics, particularly where it is pertinent to experiment, also features.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde jul. 2012 / hasta dic. 2023 | Nature.com |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
1745-2473
ISSN electrónico
1745-2481
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Size-controlled quantum dots reveal the impact of intraband transitions on high-order harmonic generation in solids
Kotaro Nakagawa; Hideki Hirori; Shunsuke A. Sato; Hirokazu Tahara; Fumiya Sekiguchi; Go Yumoto; Masaki Saruyama; Ryota Sato; Toshiharu Teranishi; Yoshihiko Kanemitsu
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 874-878
Multimode photon blockade
Srivatsan Chakram; Kevin He; Akash V. Dixit; Andrew E. Oriani; Ravi K. Naik; Nelson Leung; Hyeokshin Kwon; Wen-Long Ma; Liang Jiang; David I. Schuster
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 879-884
Chern mosaic and Berry-curvature magnetism in magic-angle graphene
Sameer Grover; Matan Bocarsly; Aviram Uri; Petr Stepanov; Giorgio Di Battista; Indranil Roy; Jiewen Xiao; Alexander Y. Meltzer; Yuri Myasoedov; Keshav Pareek; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Binghai Yan; Ady Stern; Erez Berg; Dmitri K. Efetov; Eli Zeldov
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 885-892
Superconducting quantum interference at the atomic scale
Sujoy Karan; Haonan Huang; Ciprian Padurariu; Björn Kubala; Andreas Theiler; Annica M. Black-Schaffer; Gonzalo Morrás; Alfredo Levy Yeyati; Juan Carlos Cuevas; Joachim Ankerhold; Klaus Kern; Christian R. Ast
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>A single spin in a Josephson junction can reverse the flow of the supercurrent by changing the sign of the superconducting phase difference across it. At mesoscopic length scales, these π-junctions are employed in various applications, such as finding the pairing symmetry of the underlying superconductor, as well as quantum computing. At the atomic scale, the counterpart of a single spin in a superconducting tunnel junction is known as a Yu–Shiba–Rusinov state. Observation of the supercurrent reversal in that setting has so far remained elusive. Here we demonstrate such a 0 to π transition of a Josephson junction through a Yu–Shiba–Rusinov state as we continuously change the impurity–superconductor coupling. We detect the sign change in the critical current by exploiting a second transport channel as reference in analogy to a superconducting quantum interference device, which provides our scanning tunnelling microscope with the required phase sensitivity. The measured change in the Josephson current is a signature of the quantum phase transition and allows its characterization with high resolution.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 893-898
Long-lived phantom helix states in Heisenberg quantum magnets
Paul Niklas Jepsen; Yoo Kyung ‘Eunice’ Lee; Hanzhen Lin; Ivana Dimitrova; Yair Margalit; Wen Wei Ho; Wolfgang Ketterle
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 899-904
Thermally induced magnetic order from glassiness in elemental neodymium
Benjamin Verlhac; Lorena Niggli; Anders Bergman; Umut Kamber; Andrey Bagrov; Diana Iuşan; Lars Nordström; Mikhail I. Katsnelson; Daniel Wegner; Olle Eriksson; Alexander A. Khajetoorians
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>At finite temperatures, fluctuations invariably introduce disorder and are responsible for ultimately destroying ordered phases. Here we present an unusual magnetic transition in elemental neodymium where, with increasing temperature, long-range multiply periodic ‘multi-Q’ magnetic order emerges from a self-induced spin glass. Using temperature-dependent spin-polarized scanning tunnelling microscopy, we characterize the local order of a previously reported spin glass phase, and quantify the emergence of long-range multi-Q order with increasing temperature. We develop two analysis tools that allow us to determine the glass transition temperature from measurements of the spatially dependent magnetization. We compare these observations with atomistic spin dynamics simulations, which reproduce the qualitative observation of a phase transition from a low-temperature spin glass phase to an intermediate ordered multi-Q phase. These simulations trace the origin of the unexpected high-temperature order in weakened frustration driven by temperature-dependent sublattice correlations. These findings constitute an example of order from disorder, and provide a platform to study the rich magnetization dynamics of a self-induced spin glass.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 905-911
Breakdown of hydrodynamics below four dimensions in a fracton fluid
Paolo Glorioso; Jinkang Guo; Joaquin F. Rodriguez-Nieva; Andrew Lucas
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 912-917
Classically verifiable quantum advantage from a computational Bell test
Gregory D. Kahanamoku-Meyer; Soonwon Choi; Umesh V. Vazirani; Norman Y. Yao
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Existing experimental demonstrations of quantum computational advantage have had the limitation that verifying the correctness of the quantum device requires exponentially costly classical computations. Here we propose and analyse an interactive protocol for demonstrating quantum computational advantage, which is efficiently classically verifiable. Our protocol relies on a class of cryptographic tools called trapdoor claw-free functions. Although this type of function has been applied to quantum advantage protocols before, our protocol employs a surprising connection to Bell’s inequality to avoid the need for a demanding cryptographic property called the adaptive hardcore bit, while maintaining essentially no increase in the quantum circuit complexity and no extra assumptions. Leveraging the relaxed cryptographic requirements of the protocol, we present two trapdoor claw-free function constructions, based on Rabin’s function and the Diffie–Hellman problem, which have not been used in this context before. We also present two independent innovations that improve the efficiency of our implementation and can be applied to other quantum cryptographic protocols. First, we give a scheme to discard so-called garbage bits, removing the need for reversibility in the quantum circuits. Second, we show a natural way of performing postselection that reduces the fidelity needed to demonstrate quantum advantage. Combining these results, we describe a blueprint for implementing our protocol on Rydberg atom-based quantum devices, using hardware-native operations that have already been demonstrated experimentally.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 918-924
Time-reversal-based quantum metrology with many-body entangled states
Simone Colombo; Edwin Pedrozo-Peñafiel; Albert F. Adiyatullin; Zeyang Li; Enrique Mendez; Chi Shu; Vladan Vuletić
Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.
Pp. 925-930