One cannot understand (super)conductivity unless physical orientation is also 
included.  I.e., I would be willing to bet that superconductivity occurs when 
the current ‘flow’ is EXACTLY perpendicular to the magnetic axes.  This is EASY 
to accomplish in graphene (or other single-layer materials), but once you get a 
few layers the interactions between atoms result in non-alignment of magnetic 
dipoles, it becomes nearly impossible to achieve the kind of alignments 
necessary for superconductivity unless one removes most of the heat quanta from 
the material; is it any wonder that quantum mechanics can ONLY achieve results 
based on probabilities?

-mark

 

From: John Berry [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, February 08, 2016 5:51 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Article: Chiral magnetic effect generates quantum current

 

Ok, wow!

 

So I have for about 20 years been collecting evidence of parallel electric and 
magnetic fields creating an anomalous voltage (they don't say voltage, but 
mention extracting energy from Dirac sea and a powerful increase in 
conductivity).

I have been working with chiral effects for about 5 years, this paper is 
perfectly echoing my work.

 

I can give you a decent size list of experiments with electric current 
generating an anomalous preferred direction when current flows along a magnetic 
field like this.

 

Also the equal left and right handed Charity!  Yes I have found that too.

And then it goes on to talk about massless particles that are like electrons!

 

This just sounds like an echo chamber of my own work.

 

John (call me paranoid, but article below in case it disappears or gets 
modified)



 

Scientists at the U.S Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National 
Laboratory and Stony Brook University have discovered a new way to generate 
very low-resistance electric current in a new class of materials. The 
discovery, which relies on the separation of right- and left-"handed" 
particles, points to a range of potential applications in energy, quantum 
computing, and medical imaging, and possibly even a new mechanism for inducing 
superconductivity—the ability of some materials to carry current with no energy 
loss.

The material the scientists worked with, zirconium pentatelluride, has a 
surprising trait: When placed in parallel electric and magnetic fields, it 
responds with an imbalance in the number of right- and left-handed particles—a 
chiral imbalance. That imbalance pushes oppositely charged particles in 
opposite directions to create a powerful electric current.

This "chiral magnetic effect" had long been predicted theoretically, but never 
observed definitively in a materials science laboratory at the time this work 
was done.

In fact, when physicists in Brookhaven's Condensed Matter Physics & Materials 
Science Department (CMP&MS) first measured the significant drop in electrical 
resistance, and the accompanying dramatic increase in conductivity, they were 
quite surprised. "We didn't know this large magnitude of 'negative 
magnetoresistance' was possible," said Qiang Li, a physicist and head of the 
advanced energy materials group in the department and a co-author on a paper 
describing these results just published in the journal Nature Physics. But 
after teaming up with Dmitri Kharzeev, the head of the RIKEN-BNL theory group 
at Brookhaven and a professor at Stony Brook, the scientists had an explanation.

Kharzeev had explored similar behavior of subatomic particles in the magnetic 
fields created in collisions at the Lab's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider 
(RHIC), a DOE Office of Science User Facility where nuclear physicists explore 
the fundamental building blocks of matter. He suggested that in both the RHIC 
collisions and zirconium pentatelluride, the separation of charges could be 
triggered by a chiral imbalance.

To test the idea, they compared their measurements with the mathematical 
predictions of how powerful the increase in conductivity should be with 
increasing  <http://phys.org/tags/magnetic+field/> magnetic field strength.

"We looked at the data and we said, 'Gee, that's it!' We tested six different 
samples and confirmed that no matter how you do it, it's there as long as the 
magnetic field is parallel to the electrical current. That's the smoking gun," 
Li said.

Going Chiral

Right- or left-handed chirality is determined by whether a particle's spin is 
aligned with or against its direction of motion. In order for chirality to be 
definitively established, particles have to behave as if they are nearly 
massless and able to move as such in all three spatial directions.

While free-flowing nearly massless particles are commonly found in the 
quark-gluon plasma created at RHIC, this was not expected to occur in condensed 
matter. However, in some recently discovered materials, including "Dirac 
semimetals"—named for the physicist who wrote the equations to describe 
fast-moving electrons—nearly massless "quasiparticle" versions of electrons 
(and positively charged "holes") propagate through the crystal in this free 
manner.

Some aspects of this phenomenon, namely the linear dependence of the particles' 
energy on their momentum, can be directly measured and visualized using 
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES).

"On first sight, zirconium pentatelluride did not even look like a 3D 
material," said Brookhaven physicist Tonica Valla, who performed the 
measurements with collaborators at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) at Lawrence 
Berkeley National Laboratory and at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light 
Source (NSLS,  <https://www.bnl.gov/ps/nsls/about-NSLS.asp> 
https://www.bnl.gov/ps/nsls/about-NSLS.asp)—two additional DOE Office of 
Science User Facilities. "It is layered, similar to graphite, so a quasi-2D 
electronic structure would be more expected. However, as soon as we did the 
first ARPES measurements, it was clear that the material is a 3D Dirac 
semimetal."

These results agreed nicely with the ones on conductivity and explained why the 
chiral magnetic effect was observed in this material.

In the absence of magnetic and electric fields, zirconium pentatelluride has an 
even split of right- and left- handed quasiparticles. But adding parallel 
magnetic and electric fields introduces a chiral preference: The magnetic field 
aligns the spins of the positive and negative particles in opposite directions, 
and the electric field starts the oppositely charged particles moving—positive 
particles move with the electric field, negative ones against it. If the two 
fields are pointing in the same direction, this creates a preference for 
positive and negative particles that are each moving in a direction aligned 
with their spin orientation—right-handed chiral particles—but with positive and 
negative particles moving away from one another. (If the magnetic field 
orientation is flipped relative to the electric field, the preference would be 
for left-handed particles, but still with opposite charges separating.)

"This chiral imbalance gives a big boost to the separation of the oppositely 
charged particles, which can be connected through an external circuit," 
Kharzeev said. And once the chiral state is set it's hard to alter, "so very 
little energy is lost in this chiral current."

Potential applications

The dramatic conductivity and low electrical resistance of Dirac semimetals may 
be key to potential applications, including "quantum electricity generators" 
and  <http://phys.org/tags/quantum+computing/> quantum computing, Li said.

"In a classic generator, the current increases linearly with increasing 
magnetic field strength, which needs to be changing dynamically. In these 
materials, current increases much more dramatically in a static magnetic field. 
You could pull current out of the 'sea' of available quasiparticles 
continuously. It's a pure quantum behavior," Li said.

Separating the two chiral states could also give a new way of encoding 
information—analogous to the zeros and ones of computing. And because the 
chiral state is very stable compared with other electrical states, it's much 
less prone to interference from external influences, including defects in the 
material. It could therefore be a more reliable material for quantum computing, 
Li said.

Kharzeev has some other ideas: "The resistance of this material drops as the 
magnetic field strength increases, which could open up a completely different 
route toward achieving something like superconductivity—zero resistance," he 
said. Right now the materials show at least some reduction in resistance at 
temperatures as high as 100 Kelvin—in the realm of the best high-temperature 
superconductors. But there are many different types of Dirac semimetals to 
experiment with to explore the possibility of higher temperatures or even more 
dramatic effects. Such low-resistance materials could help overcome a major 
limit in the speed of microprocessors by reducing the dissipation of current, 
Kharzeev added.

"In zirconium pentatelluride and other materials that have since been 
discovered to have the chiral magnetic effect, an external magnetic field is 
required to start reducing resistivity," Valla said. "However, we envision that 
in some magnetic materials, the electrical current could flow with little or no 
resistance in a direction parallel with the material's internal magnetic field. 
That would eliminate the need for external magnetic fields and would offer 
another avenue for dissipationless transport of electrical current."

Kharzeev and Li are also interested in exploring unusual optical properties in 
chiral materials. "These materials possess collective excitations in the 
terahertz frequency range, which could be important for wireless communications 
and also in imaging techniques that could improve the diagnosis of cancer," 
Kharzeev said.

Getting back to his nuclear physics roots, Kharzeev added, "The existence of 
massless quasiparticles that strongly interact makes this material quite 
similar to the quark-gluon plasma created in collisions at RHIC, where nearly 
massless quarks strongly interact through the exchange of gluons. So this makes 
Dirac semimetals an interesting arena for testing some of the ideas proposed in 
nuclear physics."

"This research illustrates a deep connection between two seemingly unrelated 
fields, and required contributions from an interdisciplinary team of condensed 
matter and nuclear physicists," said James Misewich, the Associate Laboratory 
Director for Energy Science at Brookhaven Lab and a professor of physics at 
Stony Brook University, who played the central role of introducing the members 
of this research team to one another. "We're fortunate to have scientists with 
expertise in these fields here at Brookhaven and nearby Stony Brook University, 
and the kind of collaborative spirit to make such a project come to fruition," 
he said.



Read more at:  
<http://phys.org/news/2016-02-chiral-magnetic-effect-quantum-current.html#jCp> 
http://phys.org/news/2016-02-chiral-magnetic-effect-quantum-current.html#jCp

 

On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 12:11 PM, Jack Cole <[email protected]> wrote:

Scientists at the U.S Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National 
Laboratory and Stony Brook University have discovered a new way to generate 
very low-resistance electric current in a new class …

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