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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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March 2014 Volume 10, Issue 3 |
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| Editorial Correspondence Thesis Research Highlights News and Views Letters Articles Futures
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Editorial | Top |
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Venture and gain p173 doi:10.1038/nphys2925 An ambitious programme to achieve power generation from nuclear fusion is making some progress, at last.
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Correspondence | Top |
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Testing the reality of the quantum state p174 Seyyed M. H. Halataei doi:10.1038/nphys2874
See also: Correspondence by Pusey et al.
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Reply to "Testing the reality of the quantum state" pp174 - 175 Matthew F. Pusey, Jonathan Barrett and Terry Rudolph doi:10.1038/nphys2875
See also: Correspondence by Halataei
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Thesis | Top |
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The great example p176 Mark Buchanan doi:10.1038/nphys2910
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Research Highlights | Top |
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Picturing paints | Living in the past | Tiny lights | Cold flow | Sound selection
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News and Views | Top |
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Letters | Top |
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Manipulating a qubit through the backaction of sequential partial measurements and real-time feedback pp189 - 193 M. S. Blok, C. Bonato, M. L. Markham, D. J. Twitchen, V. V. Dobrovitski et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2881 Quantum measurements affect the state of the system, so they can be used both as probe and control knob. This idea is demonstrated in an experiment with nuclear spin qubits in diamond that are manipulated by measurements alone.
See also: News and Views by Acosta
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Transport near a quantum critical point in BaFe2(As1–xPx)2 pp194 - 197 James G. Analytis, H-H. Kuo, Ross D. McDonald, Mark Wartenbe, P. M. C. Rourke et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2869 Quantum critical behaviour has been observed in many metallic systems that do not behave conventionally as Fermi liquids. High-magnetic-field experiments now reveal clear evidence for quantum criticality in an iron-based high-temperature superconductor.
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A one-dimensional liquid of fermions with tunable spin pp198 - 201 Guido Pagano, Marco Mancini, Giacomo Cappellini, Pietro Lombardi, Florian Schäfer et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2878 The physics of one-dimensional many-body systems is rich but still insufficiently understood. An ultracold atom experiment investigates the behaviour of one-dimensional strongly correlated fermions with a tunable number of spin components.
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Measuring the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in a weak ferromagnet pp202 - 206 V. E. Dmitrienko, E. N. Ovchinnikova, S. P. Collins, G. Nisbet, G. Beutier et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2859 Oxygen-mediated superexchange (or Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya) interactions result in weak ferromagnetism in oxides. A method based on the interference of synchrotron X-ray radiation is now shown to enable the determination of the sign of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in the prototypical weak ferromagnet iron borate.
See also: News and Views by Hu
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Double ionization probed on the attosecond timescale pp207 - 211 Erik P. Månsson, Diego Guénot, Cord L. Arnold, David Kroon, Susan Kasper et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2880 To better understand the mechanisms of double ionization following the absorption of one photon, a combination of experimental techniques has been developed to probe the electron emission times in xenon on the attosecond timescale.
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Bacterial transport suppressed by fluid shear pp212 - 217 Roberto Rusconi, Jeffrey S. Guasto and Roman Stocker doi:10.1038/nphys2883 Bacteria often reside in fluids. Now, it is shown that hydrodynamic shear, which creates forces and torques on bacterial suspensions, stimulates the attachment of bacteria to surfaces and seriously hinders chemotaxis.
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Articles | Top |
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Evidence for quantum annealing with more than one hundred qubits pp218 - 224 Sergio Boixo, Troels F. Rønnow, Sergei V. Isakov, Zhihui Wang, David Wecker et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2900 Quantum annealing is expected to solve certain optimization problems more efficiently, but there are still open questions regarding the functioning of devices such as D-Wave One. A numerical and experimental investigation of its performance shows evidence for quantum annealing with 108 qubits.
See also: News and Views by Browne
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Visualization of electron nematicity and unidirectional antiferroic fluctuations at high temperatures in NaFeAs pp225 - 232 E. P. Rosenthal, E. F. Andrade, C. J. Arguello, R. M. Fernandes, L. Y. Xing et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2870 Superconductivity in iron pnictides seems to be related to the formation of electronic nematic phases that break the rotational symmetry of the crystal lattice. But the nematic phase in NaFeAs is now shown to persist at high temperatures owing to the presence of antiferroic fluctuations.
See also: News and Views by Davis & Hirschfeld
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Observation of three-dimensional massless Kane fermions in a zinc-blende crystal pp233 - 238 M. Orlita, D. M. Basko, M. S. Zholudev, F. Teppe, W. Knap et al. doi:10.1038/nphys2857 Graphene and topological-insulator surfaces are well known for their two-dimensional conic electronic dispersion relation. Now three-dimensional hyperconic dispersion is shown for electrons in a HgCdTe crystal—once again bridging solid-state physics and quantum electrodynamics.
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Futures | Top |
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A final problem p240 A. C. Doyle doi:10.1038/nphys2917 Beware a sure thing.
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