646 research outputs found
The Ground State of the Pseudogap in Cuprate Superconductors
We present studies of the electronic structure of La2-xBaxCuO4, a system
where the superconductivity is strongly suppressed as static spin and charge
orders or "stripes" develop near the doping level of x=1/8. Using
angle-resolved photoemission and scanning tunneling microscopy, we detect an
energy gap at the Fermi surface with magnitude consistent with d-wave symmetry
and with linear density of states, vanishing only at four nodal points, even
when superconductivity disappears at x=1/8. Thus, the non-superconducting,
"striped" state at x=1/8 is consistent with a phase incoherent d-wave
superconductor whose Cooper pairs form spin/charge ordered structures instead
of becoming superconducting.Comment: This is the author's version of the wor
A review of feeding intolerance in critically ill children
© 2018, The Author(s). Ensuring optimal nutrition is vital in critically ill children and enteral feeding is the main route of delivery in intensive care. Feeding intolerance is the most commonly cited reason amongst pediatric intensive care unit healthcare professionals for stopping or withholding enteral nutrition, yet the definition for this remains inconsistent, nebulous, and entirely arbitrary. Not only does this pose problems clinically, but research in this field frequently uses feeding intolerance as an endpoint and the heterogeneity in this definition makes the comparison of studies difficult and meta-analysis impossible. We reviewed the use of, and definitions of, the term feed intolerance in pediatric intensive care research papers in the last 20years. Gastric residual volume remains the most common factor used to define feed intolerance, despite the lack of evidence for this. Healthcare professionals would benefit from further education to improve their awareness of the limitations of the markers to define feeding intolerance, and the international PICU community needs to agree a consistent definition of this phenomenon to improve consistency in both practice and research. Conclusion: This paper will provide a narrative review of the definitions of, evidence for, and markers of feeding intolerance in critically ill children.What is Known?:• Feeding intolerance is a commonly cited reason amongst pediatric intensive care unit healthcare professionals for stopping or withholding enteral nutrition.• There is no agreed definition for feeding intolerance in critically ill children.What is New?:• This paper provides an up to date review of the definitions of, evidence for, and markers of feeding intolerance in critically ill children.• Despite no evidence, gastric residual volume continues to drive clinical bedside decisions about enteral feeding and feeding tolerance
Measurement of an Exceptionally Weak Electron-Phonon Coupling on the Surface of the Topological Insulator BiSe Using Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy
Gapless surface states on topological insulators are protected from elastic
scattering on non-magnetic impurities which makes them promising candidates for
low-power electronic applications. However, for wide-spread applications, these
states should have to remain coherent at ambient temperatures. Here, we studied
temperature dependence of the electronic structure and the scattering rates on
the surface of a model topological insulator, BiSe, by high resolution
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We found an extremely weak
broadening of the topological surface state with temperature and no anomalies
in the state's dispersion, indicating exceptionally weak electron-phonon
coupling. Our results demonstrate that the topological surface state is
protected not only from elastic scattering on impurities, but also from
scattering on low-energy phonons, suggesting that topological insulators could
serve as a basis for room temperature electronic devices.Comment: published version, 5 pages, 4 figure
Charge order, metallic behavior and superconductivity in La_{2-x}Ba_xCuO_4 with x=1/8
The ab-plane optical properties of a cleaved single crystal of
La_{2-x}Ba_xCuO_4 for x=1/8 (T_c ~ 2.4 K) have been measured over a wide
frequency and temperature range. The low-frequency conductivity is Drude-like
and shows a metallic response with decreasing temperature. However, below ~ 60
K, corresponding to the onset of charge-stripe order, there is a rapid loss of
spectral weight below about 40 meV. The gapping of single-particle excitations
looks surprisingly similar to that observed in superconducting
La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_4, including the presence of a residual Drude peak with
reduced weight; the main difference is that the lost spectral weight moves to
high, rather than zero, frequency, reflecting the absence of a bulk
superconducting condensate.Comment: 4 pages, with 1 table and 3 figure
Gapped Surface States in a Strong-Topological-Semimetal
A three-dimensional strong-topological-insulator or -semimetal hosts
topological surface states which are often said to be gapless so long as
time-reversal symmetry is preserved. This narrative can be mistaken when
surface state degeneracies occur away from time-reversal-invariant momenta. The
mirror-invariance of the system then becomes essential in protecting the
existence of a surface Fermi surface. Here we show that such a case exists in
the strong-topological-semimetal BiSe. Angle-resolved photoemission
spectroscopy and \textit{ab initio} calculations reveal partial gapping of
surface bands on the BiSe-termination of BiSe(111), where an 85
meV gap along closes to zero toward the mirror-invariant
azimuth. The gap opening is attributed to an interband
spin-orbit interaction that mixes states of opposite spin-helicity.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
High-energy kink in high-temperature superconductors
In conventional metals, electron-phonon coupling, or the phonon-mediated
interaction between electrons, has long been known to be the pairing
interaction responsible for the superconductivity. The strength of this
interaction essentially determines the superconducting transition temperature
TC. One manifestation of electron-phonon coupling is a mass renormalization of
the electronic dispersion at the energy scale associated with the phonons. This
renormalization is directly observable in photoemission experiments. In
contrast, there remains little consensus on the pairing mechanism in cuprate
high temperature superconductors. The recent observation of similar
renormalization effects in cuprates has raised the hope that the mechanism of
high temperature superconductivity may finally be resolved. The focus has been
on the low energy renormalization and associated "kink" in the dispersion at
around 50 meV. However at that energy scale, there are multiple candidates
including phonon branches, structure in the spin-fluctuation spectrum, and the
superconducting gap itself, making the unique identification of the excitation
responsible for the kink difficult. Here we show that the low-energy
renormalization at ~50 meV is only a small component of the total
renormalization, the majority of which occurs at an order of magnitude higher
energy (~350 meV). This high energy kink poses a new challenge for the physics
of the cuprates. Its role in superconductivity and relation to the low-energy
kink remains to be determined.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
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