20,257 research outputs found
Valley contrasting physics in graphene: magnetic moment and topological transport
We investigate physical properties that can be used to distinguish the valley
degree of freedom in systems where inversion symmetry is broken, using graphene
systems as examples. We show that the pseudospin associated with the valley
index of carriers has an intrinsic magnetic moment, in close analogy with the
Bohr magneton for the electron spin. There is also a valley dependent Berry
phase effect that can result in a valley contrasting Hall transport, with
carriers in different valleys turning into opposite directions transverse to an
in-plane electric field. These effects can be used to generate and detect
valley polarization by magnetic and electric means, forming the basis for the
so-called valley-tronics applications
Understanding the newly observed heavy pentaquark candidates
We find that several thresholds can contribute to the enhancements of the
newly observed heavy pentaquark candidates and via
the anomalous triangle singularity (ATS) transitions in the specific kinematics
of . Apart from the observed two peaks we find that
another peaks around 4.5 GeV can also be produced by the ATS. We also show that
the can be produced at leading order in decay.
This process is different from the triangle diagram and its threshold
enhancement only appears as CUSP effects if there is no pole structure or the
ATS involved. The threshold interaction associated with the presence of the ATS
turns out to be a general phenomenon and plays a crucial role in the
understanding of candidates for exotic states.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables; published version in PL
Molecular hydrodynamics of the moving contact line in two-phase immiscible flows
The ``no-slip'' boundary condition, i.e., zero fluid velocity relative to the
solid at the fluid-solid interface, has been very successful in describing many
macroscopic flows. A problem of principle arises when the no-slip boundary
condition is used to model the hydrodynamics of immiscible-fluid displacement
in the vicinity of the moving contact line, where the interface separating two
immiscible fluids intersects the solid wall. Decades ago it was already known
that the moving contact line is incompatible with the no-slip boundary
condition, since the latter would imply infinite dissipation due to a
non-integrable singularity in the stress near the contact line. In this paper
we first present an introductory review of the problem. We then present a
detailed review of our recent results on the contact-line motion in immiscible
two-phase flow, from MD simulations to continuum hydrodynamics calculations.
Through extensive MD studies and detailed analysis, we have uncovered the slip
boundary condition governing the moving contact line, denoted the generalized
Navier boundary condition. We have used this discovery to formulate a continuum
hydrodynamic model whose predictions are in remarkable quantitative agreement
with the MD simulation results at the molecular level. These results serve to
affirm the validity of the generalized Navier boundary condition, as well as to
open up the possibility of continuum hydrodynamic calculations of immiscible
flows that are physically meaningful at the molecular level.Comment: 36 pages with 33 figure
Photoproduction of hidden charm pentaquark states and
We propose to study the pentaquark candidates of and
in photoproduction and look for further experimental
evidence for their nature. Since the photoproduction process does not satisfy
the so-called "anomalous triangle singularity" condition their presence in
photoproduction would conclude that they should be genuine states and
provide further evidence for their existence.Comment: Accepted by Phys.Rev.
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