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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(21): e2320384121, 2024 May 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38743620

RESUMO

A recent advance in the study of emergent magnetic monopoles was the discovery that monopole motion is restricted to dynamical fractal trajectories [J. N. Hallén et al., Science 378, 1218 (2022)], thus explaining the characteristics of magnetic monopole noise spectra [R. Dusad et al., Nature 571, 234 (2019); A. M. Samarakoon et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 119, e2117453119 (2022)]. Here, we apply this novel theory to explore the dynamics of field-driven monopole currents, finding them composed of two quite distinct transport processes: initially swift fractal rearrangements of local monopole configurations followed by conventional monopole diffusion. This theory also predicts a characteristic frequency dependence of the dissipative loss angle for AC field-driven currents. To explore these novel perspectives on monopole transport, we introduce simultaneous monopole current control and measurement techniques using SQUID-based monopole current sensors. For the canonical material Dy2Ti2O7, we measure [Formula: see text], the time dependence of magnetic flux threading the sample when a net monopole current [Formula: see text] is generated by applying an external magnetic field [Formula: see text] These experiments find a sharp dichotomy of monopole currents, separated by their distinct relaxation time constants before and after t ~[Formula: see text] from monopole current initiation. Application of sinusoidal magnetic fields [Formula: see text] generates oscillating monopole currents whose loss angle [Formula: see text] exhibits a characteristic transition at frequency [Formula: see text] over the same temperature range. Finally, the magnetic noise power is also dichotomic, diminishing sharply after t ~[Formula: see text]. This complex phenomenology represents an unprecedented form of dynamical heterogeneity generated by the interplay of fractionalization and local spin configurational symmetry.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 115(42): 11508-14, 2011 Oct 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21916471

RESUMO

Azoaromatic dyes have been extensively investigated over the past decade due to their potential use in a variety of optical devices that exploit their ultrafast photoisomerization processes. Among the azoaromatic dyes, Disperse Red 19 is a commercially available azobenzene nonlinear optical chromophore with a relatively high ground-state dipole moment. In the present study, we used ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy to clarify the dynamics of a push-pull substituted azobenzene dye. Solution and film samples exhibited different ultrafast dynamics, indicating that the molecular environment affects the photoisomerization dynamics of the dye.

3.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3893, 2021 Jun 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34162864

RESUMO

High-temperature superconductive (SC) cuprates exhibit not only a SC phase, but also competing orders, suppressing superconductivity. Charge order (CO) has been recognized as an important competing order, but its microscopic spatial interplay with SC phase as well as the interlayer coupling in CO and SC phases remain elusive, despite being essential for understanding the physical mechanisms of competing orders and hence superconductivity. Here we report the achievement of direct real-space imaging with atomic-scale resolution of cryogenically cleaved YBa2Cu3O6.81 using cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy. CO nanodomains are found embedded in the SC phase with a proximity-like boundary region characterized by mutual suppression of CO and superconductivity. Furthermore, SC coherence as well as CO occur on both CuO chain and plane layers, revealing carrier transport and density of states mixing between layers. The CO antiphase correlation along the c direction suggests a dominance of Coulomb repulsion over Josephson tunneling between adjacent layers.

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