Astro Seminar: Furea Kiuchi
Magnetic fields in the High Velocity Clouds
Abstract:
The high velocity clouds (HVCs) that cover the sky around the Milky Way are now
widely believed to be low-metallicity gas that is being accreted by the Galaxy,
fueling star formation and stabilizing the Galactic disk. There is a fundamental
question about what holds the clouds together as coherent entities. One possible
mechanism for stabilizing a cloud is its magnetic field. Indeed, the interaction of a falling
cloud with the galactic halo depends keenly on the strength and orientation of the
magnetic field. Smith's Cloud is one of those falling clouds that is on its way to
interact with the galactic plane. I'll talk about its current observational result while
trying to remove the possible instrumental effects.
Condensed Matter Seminar: Dawn Bonnell
Manipulating surface properties with purpose: from ferroelectric dipoles to plasmonic resonances
Condensed Matter Seminar: Olexei Motrunich
From Bose-metals of frustrated spins and bosons to non-Fermi-liquids of electrons
Condensed Matter Seminar: Lukasz Fidkowski
Topological Phases in One Dimension
Condensed Matter Seminar: Babak Seredjeh
Topological Exciton Condensate
Babak Seradjeh (IU)
Recent advances in the study of band insulators have revealed the
existence of new topological invariants that characterize these
materials. Among the three-dimensional time-reversal invariant
insulators a "strong" topological insulator (STI) was predicted to
exist, shortly followed by experimental confirmations in several
Bi-related materials with strong spin-orbit interaction. The STI is
physically distinguished by surface states with an odd number of Fermi
level crossing pairs, which remain metallic in the presence of weak
disorder. These states exhibit linear dispersion and behave as
massless Dirac fermions familiar from the physics of graphene. Having
an odd number of Dirac fermions leads to some exotic properties
associated with surfaces of a STI, such as a fractional quantum Hall
conductivity.
We have recently predicted that a "topological exciton condensate" is
spontaneously formed by the Coulomb interaction in a thin-film STI,
which intriguingly supports vortices with a precisely fractional value
of charge, e/2. This is a distinct correlated phase of matter enabled
by the special properties of topological insulators. I shall review
these developments and present our theory of the topological exciton
condensate. I will also discuss recent results on the effects of
particle-hole imbalance which show a spatially modulated condensate
can form in this case akin to the elusive
Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinikov state in an s-wave superconductor. I
will conclude by suggestions for the experimental observation of this
novel condensate.
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This week's CM/CAM seminar will be given by Babak Seradjeh, a new professor at Indiana University-Bloomington. His will speak about his work onthin films of topological insulators, but there are are also interesting connections with graphene.
Dont miss it! Refreshments will be provided before.
Condensed Matter Seminar: Cristian Staii
Application of Advanced Scanning Probe Microscopies in Biophysics and Condensed Matter Physics: from Neuronal Networks to Reduced Graphene Oxide Nanosensors
Invented in 1986, the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) is probably the single most important tool in nanotechnology. A whole host of AFM-based techniques called Scanning Probe Microscopies (SPMs) have been developed to study a wide range of systems from imaging surfaces with sub-nanometer (sometimes even atomic) resolution and manipulation of matter at the level of molecules (nanoscale level) to studies of physical properties of biomolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids. In this presentation I will exemplify the use of SPMs to study some fundamental biophysical processes as well as the electronic transport in low-dimensional systems. As a first example, I will show that the AFM can be used to immobilize proteins at well-defined locations directly onto gold substrates, and to control effectively the adhesion, growth and interconnectivity of cortical neurons on these surfaces. I will demonstratethat this method allows us to control geometric and chemical factors that can be used to influence the growth and development of neuronal assemblages in simple geometries. As a second example, I will describe the use of SPM to study the doping mechanism and the charge transport in reduced graphene oxide chemical sensors.
Condensed Matter Seminar Calendar
van Winter Lecture: Paul Steinhardt
Once Upon a Time in Kamchatka: The Extraordinary Search for Natural Quasicrystals
Refreshments at 3pm in CP179.
https://pa.as.uky.edu/van-winter-memorial-lecture-0
Theory Seminar: Yu Nakayama
Surprising trace anomaly from freakolography
Yu Nakayama
(Caltech)
Mon. Mar. 19 @ 12:00 PM
Room CP 179
ABSTRACT
One of the myths in theoretical physics is that in four-dimension, the trace anomaly is given only by the central charges "a" and "c". I'd like to discuss other possibilities e.g. R2 term and Hirzebruch-Pontryagin density. In particular, I'll show how these can arise in a ``freakolographic computation". Are they really consistent? Any pathology? I'd like to challenge how far the holograhic computation can go. The obvious but sutble distinction between scale invariance and conformal invariane will be emphasized.
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