上一頁下一頁
  • IMG_4196.JPG
  • IMG_4197.JPG
  • IMG_4205.JPG
  • IMG_4212.JPG
  • IMG_4217.JPG
  • IMG_4220.JPG
  • IMG_4220_副本.jpg

    IMG_4220_副本

  • IMG_4222.JPG
  • IMG_4224.JPG
  • IMG_4414.JPG
  • IMG_4234.JPG
  • IMG_4235.JPG
  • IMG_4237.JPG
  • IMG_4240.JPG
  • IMG_4250.JPG
  • IMG_4252.JPG
  • IMG_4263.JPG
  • IMG_4265.JPG
  • IMG_4269.JPG
  • IMG_4280.JPG
  • IMG_4285.JPG
  • IMG_4291.JPG
  • IMG_4296.JPG
  • IMG_4299.JPG
  • IMG_4263_副本.jpg

    IMG_4263_副本

  • IMG_4425.JPG
  • IMG_4425_副本.jpg

    IMG_4425_副本

  • IMG_4429.JPG
  • IMG_4430.JPG
  • IMG_4433.JPG
  • IMG_4436.JPG
  • IMG_4438.JPG
  • IMG_4441.JPG
  • IMG_4425_副本_副本.jpg

    IMG_4425_副本_副本

  • 1.JPG

    1

  • 2.JPG

    2

  • 3.JPG

    3

  • 4.JPG

    4

  • 5.JPG

    5

  • 6.JPG

    6

  • 7.JPG

    7

  • 8.JPG

    8

  • 9.JPG

    9

  • 12.jpg

    12

  • 14.jpg

    14

  • 15.jpg

    15

  • 16.jpg

    16

  • 17.jpg

    17

  • 2333.JPG

    2333

  • 20180612_180612_0003.jpg

    20180612_180612_0003

  • IMG_1013.JPG
  • IMG_1026.JPG
  • IMG_1042.JPG
  • IMG_1113.JPG
  • IMG_1171.JPG
  • IMG_1181.JPG
  • IMG_1201.JPG
  • IMG_1223.JPG
  • IMG_1267.JPG
  • S__13271240.jpg

    S__13271240

  • S__13271243.jpg

    S__13271243

  • S__13271244.jpg

    S__13271244

  • S__13271246.jpg

    S__13271246

  • S__13271247.jpg

    S__13271247

  • S__13271248.jpg

    S__13271248

  • S__13271249.jpg

    S__13271249

  • S__13271250.jpg

    S__13271250

  • S__13271251.jpg

    S__13271251

  • S__13271252.jpg

    S__13271252

  • S__13271253.jpg

    S__13271253

  • S__13271254.jpg

    S__13271254

  • S__13271255.jpg

    S__13271255

  • IMG_0480.JPG
  • IMG_0483.JPG
  • IMG_0485.JPG
  • IMG_0498.JPG
  • 紫芋千層酥 (當日現烤)購買新品「紫芋千層酥」單盒特價$260元、2盒特價$480元(原價$288盒),滿滿芋泥內餡、現烤魅力想嘗鮮絕不能錯過!.JPG

    紫芋千層酥 (當日現烤)購買新品「紫芋千層酥」單盒特價$260元、2盒特價$480元(原價$288盒),滿滿芋泥內餡、現烤魅力想嘗鮮絕不能錯過!

  • 亞尼克生乳捲-花生巧克力 (雲林限定).jpg

    亞尼克生乳捲-花生巧克力 (雲林限定)

  • 年節禮盒推薦喜Q餅禮盒.JPG

    年節禮盒推薦喜Q餅禮盒

  • 回饋在地粉絲 開幕首三日百元生乳捲限量購 顧客最早6點前來排隊.JPG

    回饋在地粉絲 開幕首三日百元生乳捲限量購 顧客最早6點前來排隊

上一頁下一頁

您尚未登入,將以訪客身份留言。亦可以上方服務帳號登入留言

其他選項
  • 0955-373-550 谷家騏
    0955-373-550 谷家騏 2019/12/29 09:05



    Move over Godzilla vs. King Kong. This is the crossover event you’ve been waiting for — at least if you’re a condensed-matter physicist. Harvard University researchers have demonstrated the first material that can have both strongly correlated electron interactions and topological properties.

    Not sure what that means? Don’t worry, we’ll walk you through it. But the important thing to know is that this discovery not only paves the way for more stable quantum computing, but also creates an entirely new platform to explore the wild world of exotic physics.

    The research was published in Nature Physics.

    Let’s start with the basics. Topological insulators are materials that can conduct electricity on their surface or edge, but not in the middle. The strange thing about these materials is that no matter how you cut them, the surface will always be conducting and the middle always insulating. These materials offer a playground for fundamental physics, and are also promising for a number of applications in special types of electronics and quantum computing.

    Since the discovery of topological insulators, researchers around the world have been working to identify materials with these powerful properties.

    “A recent boom in condensed-matter physics has come from discovering materials with topologically protected properties,” said Harris Pirie, a graduate student in the Department of Physics and first author of the paper.

    One potential material, samarium hexaboride, has been at the center of a fierce debate among condensed-matter physicists for more than a decade. At issue: Is it or isn’t it a topological insulator?

    “Over the last 10 years, a bunch of papers have come out saying yes and a bunch of papers have come out saying no,” said Pirie. “The crux of the issue is that most topological materials don’t have strongly interacting electrons, meaning the electrons move too quickly to feel each other. But samarium hexaboride does, meaning that electrons inside this material slow down enough to interact strongly. In this realm, the theory gets fairly speculative and it’s been unclear whether or not it’s possible for materials with strongly interacting properties to also be topological. As experimentalists, we’ve been largely operating blind with materials like this.”

    In order to settle the debate and figure out, once and for all, whether it’s possible to have both strongly interacting and topological properties, the researchers first needed to find a well-ordered patch of samarium hexaboride surface on which to perform the experiment.
    A simulation of electrons scattering off atomic defects in samarium hexaboride.

    A simulation of electrons scattering off atomic defects in samarium hexaboride. By observing the waves, the researchers could figure out the momentum of the electrons in relation to their energy.

    Video courtesy of Harris Pirie/Harvard University

    It was no easy task, considering the majority of the material surface is a craggy, disordered mess. The researchers used ultrahigh precision measurement tools developed in the lab of Jenny Hoffman, the Clowes Professor of Science and senior author of the paper, to find a suitable, atomic-scale patch of samarium hexaboride.

    Next, the team set out to determine if the material was topologically insulating by sending waves of electrons through the material and scattering them off of atomic defects — like dropping a pebble into a pond. By observing the waves, the researchers could figure out the momentum of the electrons in relation to their energy.

    “We found that the momentum of the electrons is directly proportional to their energy, which is the smoking gun of a topological insulator,” said Pirie. “It’s really exciting to be finally moving into this intersection of interacting physics and topological physics. We don’t know what we’ll find here.”

    As it relates to quantum computing, strongly interacting topological materials may be able to protect qubits from forgetting their quantum state, a process called decoherence.
    Related
    Artist's drawing for Google Quantum
    Riding the quantum computing ‘wave’

    Harvard Quantum Initiative Co-Director Lukin on ‘quantum supremacy’ and Google’s announcement of its achievement
    Physics Professors Markus Greiner (left) and Mikhail Lukin led a Harvard-MIT team that developed a 51-qubit quantum simulator, one of the largest such systems yet built.
    Researchers create quantum calculator

    New system could shed light on a host of complex processes

    “If we could encode the quantum information in a topologically protected state, it is less susceptible to external noise that can accidentally switch the qubit,” said Hoffman. “Microsoft already has a large team pursuing topological quantum computation in composite materials and nanostructures. Our work demonstrates a first in a single topological material that harnesses strong electron interactions that might eventually be used for topological quantum computing.”

    “The next step will be to use the combination of topologically protected quantum states and strong interactions to engineer novel quantum states of matter, such as topological superconductors,” said Dirk Morr, professor of physics at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and the senior theorist on the paper. “Their extraordinary properties could open unprecedented possibilities for the implementation of topological quantum bits.”

    This research was co-authored by Yu Liu, Anjan Soumyanarayanan, Pengcheng Chen, Yang He, M.M. Yee, P.F.S. Rosa, J.D. Thompson, Dae-Jeong Kim, Z. Fisk, Xiangfeng Wang, Johnpierre Paglione, and M.H. Hamidian.

    The electronic measurements at Harvard and the samarium hexaboride crystal growth at UC Irvine were supported by the National Science Foundation. The crystal growth at University of Maryland was supported by the Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation. Magnetic measurements at Los Alamos National Lab and theoretical work at University of Illinois were supported by the Department of Energy.

相片最新留言

此相簿內的相片目前沒有留言

相簿列表資訊

最新上傳:
2019/01/11
全站分類:
美食記錄
本日人氣:
0
累積人氣:
1