41 research outputs found

    Wannier Pairs in the Superconducting Twisted Bilayer Graphene and Related Systems

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    Unconventional superconductivity often arises from Cooper pairing between neighboring atomic sites, stipulating a characteristic pairing symmetry in the reciprocal space. The twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) presents a new setting where superconductivity emerges on the flat bands whose Wannier wavefunctions spread over many graphene unit cells, forming the so-called Moir\'e pattern. To unravel how Wannier states form Cooper pairs, we study the interplay between electronic, structural, and pairing instabilities in TBG. For comparisons, we also study graphene on boron-nitride (GBN) possessing a different Moir\'e pattern, and single-layer graphene (SLG) without a Moir\'e pattern. For all cases, we compute the pairing eigenvalues and eigenfunctions by solving a linearized superconducting gap equation, where the spin-fluctuation mediated pairing potential is evaluated from materials specific tight-binding band structures. We find an extended ss-wave as the leading pairing symmetry in TBG, in which the nearest-neighbor Wannier sites form Cooper pairs with same phase. In contrast, GBN assumes a p+ipp+ip-wave pairing between nearest-neighbor Wannier states with odd-parity phase, while SLG has the d+idd+id-wave symmetry for inter-sublattice pairing with even-parity phase. Moreover, while p+ipp+ip, and d+idd+id pairings are chiral, and nodeless, but the extended ss-wave channel possesses accidental {\it nodes}. The nodal pairing symmetry makes it easily distinguishable via power-law dependencies in thermodynamical entities, in addition to their direct visualization via spectroscopies

    Quantum phase transition in few-layer NbSe2_2 probed through quantized conductance fluctuations

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    We present the first observation of dynamically modulated quantum phase transition (QPT) between two distinct charge density wave (CDW) phases in 2-dimensional 2H-NbSe2_2. There is recent spectroscopic evidence for the presence of these two quantum phases, but its evidence in bulk measurements remained elusive. We studied suspended, ultra-thin \nbse devices fabricated on piezoelectric substrates - with tunable flakes thickness, disorder level and strain. We find a surprising evolution of the conductance fluctuation spectra across the CDW temperature: the conductance fluctuates between two precise values, separated by a quantum of conductance. These quantized fluctuations disappear for disordered and on-substrate devices. With the help of mean-field calculations, these observations can be explained as to arise from dynamical phase transition between the two CDW states. To affirm this idea, we vary the lateral strain across the device via piezoelectric medium and map out the phase diagram near the quantum critical point (QCP). The results resolve a long-standing mystery of the anomalously large spectroscopic gap in NbSe2_2

    Marker-Assisted Selection for Biotic Stress Resistance in Peanut

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    Peanut is the second-most important legume grown worldwide. Cultivated peanut is a disomic tetraploid, 2n—4x—40, with limited genetic diversity due to a genetic bottleneck in formation of the polyploid from ancestors A. duranensis and A. ipaensis. Consequently, resistance_to biotic stresses is limited in the cultigen; however, wild species possess strong resistances. Transfer o f these resistances is hindered by differences o f ploidy, but production o f synthetic amphidiploids, coupled with use o f molecular markers, enables efficient gene transfer. Marker maps have been made from interspecific crosses, and SSR-based maps from cultivated parents have been developed recently. At least 410 resistance gene analogues have been identified. The first markers for biotic stress tolerance were for root-knot nematode resistance and introgressed from one A. cardenasii chromosome. These and improved markers have been used for marker-assisted backcrossing, contributing to release of three cultivars. Additional QTLs have been identified since. Early and late leafspots cause significant yield losses worldwide, and resistance depends on multiple genes. Using interspecific populations, five resistance QTLs for early leafspot were identified using greenhouse inoculations, and five QTLs for late leafspot were identified using detached leaf assays. Using cultivated species populations, 28 QTLs were identified for LLS resistance; all but one were minor QTLs; the major QTL was donated by an interspecific introgression line parent. Rust often occurs alongside leafspots, and rust resistance was characterized as one major QTL, plus several smaller QTLs. Marker-assisted backcrossing o f this major QTL has been performed into different populations. QTLs for resistance to other biotic stresses have been identified, namely to groundnut rosette virus, Sclerotinia blight, afiatoxin contamination, aphids, and tomato spotted wilt virus. Marker-assisted breeding is still in early stages, and development o f more rapid and inexpensive markers from transcriptome and genome sequencing is expected to accelerate progress

    Greedy Learning of Graphical Models with Small Girth

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    Abstract — This paper develops two new greedy algorithms for learning the Markov graph of discrete probability distributions, from samples thereof. For finding the neighborhood of a node (i.e. variable), the simple, naive greedy algorithm iteratively adds the new node that gives the biggest improvement in prediction performance over the existing set. While fast to implement, this can yield incorrect graphs when there are many short cycles, as now the single node that gives the best prediction can be outside the neighborhood. Our new algorithms get around this in two different ways. The forward-backward greedy algorithm includes a deletion step, which goes back and prunes incorrect nodes that may have initially been added. The recursive greedy algorithm uses forward steps in a two-level process, running greedy iterations in an inner loop, but only including the final node. We show, both analytically and empirically, that these algorithms can learn graphs with small girth which other algorithms- both greedy, and those based on convex optimization- cannot. I

    Non-thermal superconductivity in photo-doped multi-orbital Hubbard systems

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    Superconductivity in laser-excited correlated electron systems has attracted considerable interest due to reports of light-induced superconducting-like states. Here we explore the possibility of non-thermal superconducting order in strongly interacting multi-orbital Hubbard systems, using non-equilibrium dynamical mean field theory. We find that a staggered η\eta-type superconducting phase can be realized on a bipartite lattice in the high photo-doping regime, if the effective temperature of the photo-carriers is sufficiently low. The η\eta superconducting state is stabilized by Hund coupling - a positive Hund coupling favors orbital-singlet spin-triplet η\eta pairing, whereas a negative Hund coupling stabilizes spin-singlet orbital-triplet η\eta pairing
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