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Publications

Comparing introductory and beyond-introductory students' reasoning about uncertainty

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
E.M. Stump
M. Hughes
G. Passante
N.G. Holmes
Abstract

This paper is part of the Focused Collection on Instructional labs: Improving traditions and new directions.] Uncertainty is an important concept in physics laboratory instruction. However, little work has examined how students reason about uncertainty beyond the introductory (intro) level. In this work we aimed to compare intro and beyond-intro students' ideas about uncertainty.

Journal
Physical Review Physics Education Research
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Surface Passivation Method for the Super-repellence of Aqueous Macromolecular Condensates

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
A. Testa
H.T. Spanke
E. Jambon-Puillet
M. Yasir
Y. Feng
A.M. Küffner
P. Arosio
E.R. Dufresne
R.W. Style
A.A. Rebane
Abstract

Solutions of macromolecules can undergo liquid-liquid phase separation to form droplets with ultralow surface tension. Droplets with such low surface tension wet and spread over common surfaces such as test tubes and microscope slides, complicating in vitro experiments. The development of a universal super-repellent surface for macromolecular droplets has remained elusive because their ultralow surface tension requires low surface energies.

Journal
Langmuir
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Eric Dufresne Group

Instructing nontraditional physics labs: Toward responsiveness to student epistemic framing

Author
M. Sundstrom
R.K. Fussell
A.M. Phillips
M. Akubo
S.E. Allen
D. Hammer
R.E. Scherr
N.G. Holmes
Abstract

[This paper is part of the Focused Collection on Instructional labs: Improving traditions and new directions.] Research on nontraditional laboratory (lab) activities in physics shows that students often expect to verify predetermined results, as takes place in traditional lab activities. This understanding of what is taking place, or epistemic framing, may impact students' behaviors in the lab, either productively or unproductively.

Journal
Physical Review Physics Education Research
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Frustrated charge order and cooperative distortions in ScV6 Sn6

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
G. Pokharel
B.R. Ortiz
L. Kautzsch
S.J. Gomez
K. Mallayya
G. Wu
E.-A. Kim
J.P.C. Ruff
S. Sarker
S.D. Wilson
Abstract

Here we study the stability of charge order in the kagome metal ScV6Sn6. Synchrotron x-ray diffraction measurements reveal high-temperature, short-range charge correlations at the wave vectors along q=(13,13,12) whose interlayer correlation lengths diverge upon cooling. At the charge order transition, this divergence is interrupted, and long-range order freezes in along q=(13,13,13), as previously reported, while disorder enables the charge correlations to persist at the q=(13,13,12) wave vector down to the lowest temperatures measured.

Journal
Physical Review Materials
Date Published
Group (Lab)

Atomically smooth films of CsSb: A chemically robust visible light photocathode

Author
C.T. Parzyck
C.A. Pennington
W.J.I. Debenedetti
J. Balajka
E.M. Echeverria
H. Paik
L. Moreschini
B.D. Faeth
C. Hu
J.K. Nangoi
V. Anil
T.A. Arias
M.A. Hines
D.G. Schlom
A. Galdi
K.M. Shen
J.M. Maxson
Abstract

Alkali antimonide semiconductor photocathodes provide a promising platform for the generation of high-brightness electron beams, which are necessary for the development of cutting-edge probes, including x-ray free electron lasers and ultrafast electron diffraction. Nonetheless, to harness the intrinsic brightness limits in these compounds, extrinsic degrading factors, including surface roughness and contamination, must be overcome.

Journal
APL Materials
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-2039380
DMR-2104427
PHY-1549132
DE-AC02-76SF00515
DE-SC0020144
DMR-1719875
NNCI-2025233
OAC 1920103
FA9550-21-1-0168
Group (Lab)
Kyle Shen Group
Tomas Arias Group

Chromatinization modulates topoisomerase II processivity

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Jaeyoon Lee
Meiling Wu
James Inman
Gundeep Singh
Seong Park
Joyce Lee
Robert Fulbright
Yifeng Hong
Joshua Jeong
James Berger
Michelle Wang
Abstract

AbstractType IIA topoisomerases are essential DNA processing enzymes that must robustly and reliably relax DNA torsional stress. While cellular processes constantly create varying torsional stress, how this variation impacts type IIA topoisomerase function remains obscure. Using multiple single-molecule approaches, we examined the torsional dependence of eukaryotic topoisomerase II (topo II) activity on naked DNA and chromatin. We observed that topo II is ~50-fold more processive on buckled DNA than previously estimated.

Journal
Nature Communications
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Michelle Wang Group

Entanglement in a one-dimensional critical state after measurements

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Zhou Yang
Dan Mao
Chao-Ming Jian
Abstract

The entanglement entropy (EE) of the ground state of a one-dimensional Hamiltonian at criticality has a universal logarithmic scaling with a prefactor given by the central charge c of the underlying 1+1d conformal field theory. When the system is probed by measurements, the entanglement in the critical ground state is inevitably affected due to wavefunction collapse. In this paper, we study the effect of weak measurements on the entanglement scaling in the ground state of the one-dimensional critical transverse-field Ising model.

Journal
prb
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Chao-Ming Jian Group

Tuning the Curie temperature of a two-dimensional magnet/topological insulator heterostructure to above room temperature by epitaxial growth

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Alexander Bishop
Xiyue Zhang
Katherine Robinson
Igor Lyalin
Ziling Li
Ryan Bailey-Crandell
Thow Cham
Shuyu Cheng
Yunqiu Luo
Daniel Ralph
David Muller
Roland Kawakami
Journal
PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS
Date Published
Funding Source
FA9550-19-1-0390
DE-SC0016379
RX22-OSU-22-1
DMR-2011876
FA9550-19-1-0390
FA9550-19-1-0390
DMR-1719875
NNCI-2025233

Structural color from pigment-loaded nanostructures

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
T. Sai
L.S. Froufe-Pérez
F. Scheffold
B.D. Wilts
E.R. Dufresne
Abstract

Color can originate from wavelength-dependence in the absorption of pigments or the scattering of nanostructures. While synthetic colors are dominated by the former, vivid structural colors found in nature have inspired much research on the latter. However, many of the most vibrant colors in nature involve the interactions of structure and pigment. Here, we demonstrate that pigment can be exploited to efficiently create bright structural color at wavelengths outside its absorption band.

Journal
Soft Matter
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Eric Dufresne Group

Fractionalization in Fractional Correlated Insulating States at n±1/3 Filled Twisted Bilayer Graphene

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
D. Mao
K. Zhang
E.-A. Kim
Abstract

Fractionalization without time-reversal symmetry breaking is a long-sought-after goal in the study of correlated phenomena. The earlier proposal of correlated insulating states at n±1/3 filling in twisted bilayer graphene and recent experimental observations of insulating states at those fillings strongly suggest that moiré graphene systems provide a new platform to realize time-reversal symmetric fractionalized states. However, the nature of fractional excitations and the effect of quantum fluctuation on the fractional correlated insulating states are unknown.

Journal
Physical Review Letters
Date Published
Group (Lab)