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Topological insulator with time
Topological insulator with time

Coupling and Dissociation in Artificial Molecules
Coupling and Dissociation in Artificial Molecules

Fractional topological insulators
Fractional topological insulators

Spin-polarized transport through two quantum dots Interference and Coulomb correlation effects  P.
Spin-polarized transport through two quantum dots Interference and Coulomb correlation effects P.

Nucleon-Nucleon Interaction, Deuteron
Nucleon-Nucleon Interaction, Deuteron

Quantum Theory of Molecular Magnetism - cond
Quantum Theory of Molecular Magnetism - cond

SU(3) symmetry and Baryon wave functions
SU(3) symmetry and Baryon wave functions

6 Entanglement
6 Entanglement

Phys. Rev. B 76, 035315 (2007) - Petta Group
Phys. Rev. B 76, 035315 (2007) - Petta Group

... range set by the average magnitude of the random Overhauser 共nuclear兲 field. We then consider the effect of fast control of the local electrostatic potentials of double quantum dots and show how this may be used to perform exchange gates,3,10,25 and to prepare and measure two-spin entangled states.2 ...
Embracing the quantum limit in silicon computing
Embracing the quantum limit in silicon computing

Langevin spin dynamics based on ab initio calculations: numerical
Langevin spin dynamics based on ab initio calculations: numerical

PUBLISHED VERSION Quantum heat bath for spin-lattice
PUBLISHED VERSION Quantum heat bath for spin-lattice

Advanced Quantum Mechanics - Pieter Kok
Advanced Quantum Mechanics - Pieter Kok

... choice for additional material. It has everything up to many-body quantum mechanics. 2. Quantum Information and Quantum Computation, by Nielsen and Chuang, Cambridge University Press (2000). This is the current standard work on quantum information theory. It has a comprehensive introduction to quant ...
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Physics and Instrumentation
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Physics and Instrumentation

... % Body: 80% - 95% H2O (a lot of signal source) ...
1 Introduction to quantum mechanics
1 Introduction to quantum mechanics

... considering the wavefunctions which describe electrons in atoms (atomic orbitals) or molecules (molecular orbitals). One often used interpretation of such electronic wavefunctions is to say that the square of the wavefunction gives the probability of finding the electron at that point. Wavefunctions ...
Relativistic Néel-Order Fields Induced by Electrical Current in
Relativistic Néel-Order Fields Induced by Electrical Current in

... small energy spacing of the two spin-orbit coupled bands, the enhancement is much larger, reaching 3 orders of magnitude in the present calculations. Discussion.—In our 2D Rashba model we identified a relativistic microscopic mechanism by which an electrical current J driven in a plane of an AFM lay ...
letter
letter

Topological Insulators
Topological Insulators

... monopole at the origin, but one where a tiny tube (the dirac string) comes up the negative z axis, smuggling in the entire flux. ...
Monday, Nov. 14, 2016
Monday, Nov. 14, 2016

... – Photons can interact electromagnetically with any particles with electric charge – All charged leptons participate in both EM and weak interactions – Neutral leptons do not have EM couplings – All hadrons (Mesons and baryons) responds to the strong force and appears to participate in all the inter ...
Electron spin echo studies
Electron spin echo studies

Quantum Manipulation of Two-Electron Spin States in
Quantum Manipulation of Two-Electron Spin States in

Full Text PDF
Full Text PDF

QUESTION BANK ON ATOMIC STRUCTURE-3.pmd
QUESTION BANK ON ATOMIC STRUCTURE-3.pmd

... (B) the same on all the sides around nucleus (C) zero on the z-axis (D) maximum on the two opposite sides of the nucleus along the x-axis Q69. The spin of the electron (A) increases the angular momentum (B) decreases the angular momentum (C) can be forward (clockwise) relative to the direction of th ...
Superresolution optical magnetic imaging and
Superresolution optical magnetic imaging and

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Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics and particle physics, spin is an intrinsic form of angular momentum carried by elementary particles, composite particles (hadrons), and atomic nuclei.Spin is one of two types of angular momentum in quantum mechanics, the other being orbital angular momentum. The orbital angular momentum operator is the quantum-mechanical counterpart to the classical notion of angular momentum: it arises when a particle executes a rotating or twisting trajectory (such as when an electron orbits a nucleus). The existence of spin angular momentum is inferred from experiments, such as the Stern–Gerlach experiment, in which particles are observed to possess angular momentum that cannot be accounted for by orbital angular momentum alone.In some ways, spin is like a vector quantity; it has a definite magnitude, and it has a ""direction"" (but quantization makes this ""direction"" different from the direction of an ordinary vector). All elementary particles of a given kind have the same magnitude of spin angular momentum, which is indicated by assigning the particle a spin quantum number.The SI unit of spin is the joule-second, just as with classical angular momentum. In practice, however, it is written as a multiple of the reduced Planck constant ħ, usually in natural units, where the ħ is omitted, resulting in a unitless number. Spin quantum numbers are unitless numbers by definition.When combined with the spin-statistics theorem, the spin of electrons results in the Pauli exclusion principle, which in turn underlies the periodic table of chemical elements.Wolfgang Pauli was the first to propose the concept of spin, but he did not name it. In 1925, Ralph Kronig, George Uhlenbeck and Samuel Goudsmit at Leiden University suggested a physical interpretation of particles spinning around their own axis. The mathematical theory was worked out in depth by Pauli in 1927. When Paul Dirac derived his relativistic quantum mechanics in 1928, electron spin was an essential part of it.
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