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Science

New State of Matter Detected in a Two-Dimensional Material (phys.org) 71

An anonymous reader cites a report on Phys.org: An international team of researchers have found evidence of a mysterious new state of matter, first predicted 40 years ago, in a real material. This state, known as a quantum spin liquid, causes electrons -- thought to be indivisible building blocks of nature -- to break into pieces. The researchers, including physicists from the University of Cambridge, measured the first signatures of these fractional particles, known as Majorana fermions, in a two-dimensional material with a structure similar to graphene. Their experimental results successfully matched with one of the main theoretical models for a quantum spin liquid, known as a Kitaev model. The results are reported in the journal Nature Materials. Quantum spin liquids are mysterious states of matter which are thought to be hiding in certain magnetic materials, but had not been conclusively sighted in nature. The observation of one of their most intriguing properties -- electron splitting, or fractionalisation -- in real materials is a breakthrough. The resulting Majorana fermions may be used as building blocks of quantum computers, which would be far faster than conventional computers and would be able to perform calculations that could not be done otherwise.
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New State of Matter Detected in a Two-Dimensional Material

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  • Electrons?? (Score:1, Informative)

    by utdpenguin ( 413984 )

    Are thought to be indivisible?? Since when?

    • Re:Electrons?? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by sbaker ( 47485 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @03:27PM (#51840211) Homepage

      What's worse is that Majorana fermions are their own anti-particle - so they have no charge - so if the electron split into three of them - where did it's charge go?

      This stuff is *hard* to understand!

      • What's worse is that Majorana fermions are their own anti-particle - so they have no charge - so if the electron split into three of them - where did it's charge go?

        This stuff is *hard* to understand!

        Can the charge be consumed by the action of splitting? I really don't know about sub-atomic kinetics but the energy has to go somewhere so potential(charge) to kinetic(split) is the only thing I see as an opening... otherwise I'm really not happy with energy just evaporating... Hey maybe there really is æther but it's a very short lived kinetic property of matter!

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by gstoddart ( 321705 )

        where did it's charge go?

        It re-enfrobulates the flux of the, er, doo-hicky causing the doo-dad to re-distrube the, umm, polarity of the charge of the base pairs leading to a, err, dispersion of the charge across an, um, er, tensor field exhibiting Jacobian properties and cancelling out the, um, potentiation of the matrix. Yeah, that's is, potentiation of the matrix.

        It's quite simple, really. ;-)

    • Re:Electrons?? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 04, 2016 @03:33PM (#51840279)
      Electrons cannot be divided into more fundamental particles. They're it, baby.
      • subatomic physics have come a long way from the Greeks.

    • but there used to be multiple theories about electron cathode rays, too, so someday they'll all find they're talking the same thing.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      In the standard model, electrons are indivisible.
      Protons and neutrons are made of quarks and are divisible, even though they really don't like it.

    • Re:Electrons?? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Baloroth ( 2370816 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @05:19PM (#51841065)

      Since the past 100 years or so. They're point particles, which means they have no internal structure, and aren't composed of any other particles. They can be destroyed or created, but that's not division.

      You can also split an electron's wavefunction into multiple pieces, so that it occupies certain distinct regions with various probability amplitude (and these split wavefunctions can actually have physical effects: while I'm not enough of an expert on condensed matter to say for sure, a quick skim of the paper indicates that something like that is what is happening here), that's a bit different from dividing the electron.

    • Re:Electrons?? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @05:48PM (#51841209)

      Are thought to be indivisible?? Since when?

      Electrons were certainly thought to be indivisible when first discovered (see also, atoms, protons). The answer to "since when", because that's since the electron was discovered in 1897. But you meant to imply that the electron was already know to be constituted of component particles. So a better way to do that would be an incredulous "is this XXXX?" or similar that expressed a belief it was already common knowledge.

      Pedantry aside, wikipedia tells me that all 6 leptons (which include electrons) are indivisible. So, I dunno. The Standard Model certainly assumes that they are.

  • Have we discovered magnetic monopoles?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      No.

    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
      Magnetic monopoles have been discovered as much as invisble humans have been discovered: They exist in fiction, in theories, and as clever just-sort-of-invisible surrogates in illusionist shows. In reality, though: No.
    • by whopub ( 1100981 )

      No, but we're one step closer to having a disintegration ray. Time to upgrade those sharks!

    • The magnetic monopoles in spin lattices are "quasiparticles". They aren't fundamental particles. They are basically simulations of monopoles on a crystal lattice. But these crystal patterns can still exist at a quantum scale, so they still act like particles.
      This explains it if you understand enough physics. http://www.nature.com/nature/j... [nature.com]

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @03:31PM (#51840253)
    There obviously are no "2-dimensional materials", just thin, 3-dimensional layers of material that may have interesting properties. Also, I don't believe for a second that "electrons break apart" in this "mystical" matter - this will most likely turn out to be just about some fancy maths, using fractional charges to describe a model of the "interesting properties". I stopped reading when the article started fantasizing about the use in quantum computers. That's the point where you know they just want to ride some hype in lieu of some substantial results they could present. Sorry for being so pessimistic - I'm a physicist, too.
    • by Required Snark ( 1702878 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @04:29PM (#51840707)
      It's has two dimensions for electrons confined in the material. An electron cannot move in the third dimension because it is restricted to motion in a plane. Similarly an electron or other particle (or wave) can be restricted to one dimension in a wire structure, because it only has one degree of freedom, i.e. motion along a line.

      Your objection assumes that our experience of the world, in this case three dimensions, applies at all scale and in all conditions. Modern physics refutes this assumption.

      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        The story headline and summary talks about "2 dimensional material", not "2 degrees of freedom for electrons to move". And the material is not quite "2 dimensional", if it was, we could stack an infinite amount of it into a box. Also, talking about an electron having only 2 or 1 degrees of freedom for movement is per se a little weird, as electrons have been shown the ability to tunnel through barriers definitely thicker than one layer of atoms. So if electrons were actually confined to a two-dimensional s
      • What kind of horse shit is this?
        It's a 3-dimensional material and the electrons within it will move in 3 dimensions whether you want them to or not. The thinner you make it, the more likely it'll be for the electron to tunnel out, Gotta Go Dawg! style. I guess you could restrict them to 2 dimensions if you were at absolute zero, but you'd never be able to check that to verify.

    • by Khashishi ( 775369 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @04:52PM (#51840893) Journal

      You know, I thought a journalist got a little too carried away, but actually it was the authors of the scientific paper who made these statements.

      Anyways, the electrons don't break apart. The "fractional" particles are just quasiparticles which are just labels of particular patterns found in the spins in crystal lattices. These are not fundamental particles.

  • This is interesting, but why does every new announcement in physics have to be hailed as a potential breakthrough for quantum computers? At the rate of breakthroughs in the last couple of years, we should have had working quantum computers 5 years ago.
    • we should have had working quantum computers 5 years ago

      You can put that down to bad luck. Every time we've opened a quantum computer to determine if it is working or not, the bottle of acid has broken and the quantum computer is dead...

  • An international team of researchers have found evidence of a mysterious new state of matter... known as a quantum spin liquid... in a two-dimensional material.

    Damn. That's a wasted opportunity. I would have called it "flatsma".

  • by Argos ( 173864 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @05:54AM (#51844095)

    A comment explains the "divisibility":

    This is just a misunderstanding - the electron wasn't split - only its wake deBroglie wave can be separated into a three components - quasiparticles, whereas the electron itself remains pretty untouched and safe by itself. The more it applies to electrons within magnetic material instead of vacuum, where these quasiparticles can live their own lives independent of original electron.

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