- I've been looking for ways to think about and discuss topological materials that might be more broadly accessible to non-experts, and I found this paper and videos like this one and this one. Very cool, and I'm sorry I'd missed it back in '15 when it came out.
- In the experimental literature talking about realizations of Majorana fermions in the solid state, a key signature is a peak in the conductance at zero voltage - that's an indicator that there is a "zero-energy mode" in the system. There are other ways to get zero-bias peaks, though, and nailing down whether this has the expected properties (magnitude, response to magnetic fields) has been a lingering issue. This seems to nail down the situation more firmly.
- Discussions about "quantum supremacy" strictly in terms of how many qubits can be simulated on a classical computer right now seem a bit silly to me. Ok, so IBM managed to simulate a handful of additional qubits (56 rather than 49). It wouldn't shock me if they could get up to 58 - supercomputers are powerful and programmers can be very clever. Are we going to get a flurry of news stories every time about how this somehow moves the goalposts for quantum computers?
- I'm hoping to put out a review of Max the Demon and the Entropy of Doom, since I received my beautifully printed copies this past weekend.
A blog about condensed matter and nanoscale physics. Why should high energy and astro folks have all the fun?
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Links + coming soon
Real life is a bit busy right now, but I wanted to point out a couple of links and talk about what's coming up.
Doug, thank you for posting these interesting links.
ReplyDeleteSo do you know if is there a true mathematical equivalence between edge modes in topological insulators and those in these metamaterials, or is this merely a case of "converging physics"? In other words, is there a "semiclassical" way of understanding topological insulators?
Thanks!