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SMP IOP Hanoi Nov. 18
SMP IOP Hanoi Nov. 18

abstract.
abstract.

... disk is supposed to rotate synchronously with the (very low frequency!) emitted photons. This disk is conceived so as to be conducting along only one axis in the xy plane (this can be achieved if the disk is composed of metallic thin wires aligned along a single direction within xy). Let us look at ...
Blog_mass - Magnetism, Bad Metals and Superconductivity
Blog_mass - Magnetism, Bad Metals and Superconductivity

Angular momentum
Angular momentum

... Let us assume that the operators (Lx , Ly , Lz ) ≡ L which represent the components of orbital angular momentum in quantum mechanics can be defined in an analogous manner to the corresponding components of classical angular momentum. In other words, we are going to assume that the above equations sp ...
NEW HINTS FROM THEORY FOR PUMPING SPIN CURRENTS IN
NEW HINTS FROM THEORY FOR PUMPING SPIN CURRENTS IN

... of Chern numbers. Later it was found that nonlinear systems can give raise to oneparameter forms of pumping and in this case the quantization of the pumped charge does not occur. L. Foa Torres [5] predicted the one-parameter pumping from a non-linear system consisting of a ring pierced by a magnetic ...
Zeeman effect – Studying magnetic fields in star
Zeeman effect – Studying magnetic fields in star

Topologically Ordered States and their Hamiltonians
Topologically Ordered States and their Hamiltonians

... the effect of braiding of excitation world lines [1,2]. In spatially two-dimensional systems, braiding phenomena lead to fractional statistics of excitations and to the corresponding form of the topological order. Strongly correlated states form a certain part of the low-energy Hilbert space. When t ...
Review on Nucleon Spin Structure
Review on Nucleon Spin Structure

Section 2 Notes
Section 2 Notes

... number to describe the electrons in the atom. Only the size of the orbit was important in the Bohr Model, which was described by the n quantum number. Schrödinger described an atomic model with electrons in three dimensions. This model required three coordinates, or three quantum numbers, to describ ...
Chem4050_lecture1_2017-22xcfkp
Chem4050_lecture1_2017-22xcfkp

arXiv:0803.3834v2 [quant-ph] 26 May 2009
arXiv:0803.3834v2 [quant-ph] 26 May 2009

Chapter 11 Coordination Chemistry III: Electronic Spectra
Chapter 11 Coordination Chemistry III: Electronic Spectra

... Russell-Saunders coupling (LS coupling) Orbit-orbit coupling ML = ∑ml → L: total orbital angular momentum quantum number Spin-spin coupling Ms = ∑ms → S: total spin angular momentum quantum number microstates Spin-orbit coupling J = L + S : total angular momentum quantum number How many possible com ...
Outline_CH16_Klein
Outline_CH16_Klein

... 1) Nuclear Spin and Magnetic Resonant Frequency A) Spin Angular Momentum and Magnetic Moments o Spin quantum number I = ½ nuclei o Odd atomic number or odd mass number I≠0 o Spin ½ nuclei have 2 spin degenerate spin states  and  o When nucleus is not in the presence of an external magnetic field, ...
spin liquids - IPhT
spin liquids - IPhT

Shot noise of spin-polarized charge currents as a
Shot noise of spin-polarized charge currents as a

Effective Topological Field Theories in Condensed Matter Physics
Effective Topological Field Theories in Condensed Matter Physics

... The search for new states of matter The search for new elements led to a golden age of chemistry. The search for new particles led to the golden age of particle physics. In condensed matter physics, we ask what are the fundamental states of matter? In the classical world we have solid, liquid and g ...
Spin transport through nanostructures B. K ,
Spin transport through nanostructures B. K ,

January 20, 2004 9:50 WSPC/140-IJMPB 02353
January 20, 2004 9:50 WSPC/140-IJMPB 02353

PHYS2042 Quantum Mechanics (Part II)
PHYS2042 Quantum Mechanics (Part II)

H. Lee
H. Lee

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2 Quantum Theory of Spin Waves

Spin-charge separation in ultra
Spin-charge separation in ultra

Nucleus-mediated spin-flip transitions in GaAs quantum dots
Nucleus-mediated spin-flip transitions in GaAs quantum dots

Atomic Structure and Atomic Spectra
Atomic Structure and Atomic Spectra

One-dimensional electron transport in
One-dimensional electron transport in

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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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