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Insight Seminar
May 9, 2024
INSIGHT SEMINAR: Strong interactions and isospin symmetry breaking in a supermoiré lattice 

Hour: From 15:00h to 16:00h

Place: Elements Room

INSIGHT SEMINAR: Strong interactions and isospin symmetry breaking in a supermoiré lattice 

AMIR YACOBY
Harvard University

BIO:

Amir Yacoby is a Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Harvard University. He received his bachelor’s degree in the field of Aerospace engineering and then transitioned into Physics. Following a Master’s degree in theoretical Physics, Yacoby received his PhD in experimental condensed matter physics in 1994 from the Weizmann Institute of Science.

Professor Yacoby is a member of the National Academy of Science, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fellow of the American Physical Society, member of the American Academy for Advancement of Science and an external member of the Max Planck Society.

Professor Yacoby works to develop new experimental techniques to explore quantum matter and uses these techniques to obtain new insights into their underlying quantum mechanical properties.

ABSTRACT:

In multilayer moiré heterostructures, the interference of multiple twist angles ubiquitously leads to tunable ultra-long-wavelength patterns known as supermoiré lattices. However, their impact on the system’s many-body electronic phase diagram remains largely unexplored. We present local compressibility measurements revealing numerous incompressible states resulting from supermoiré-lattice-scale isospin symmetry breaking driven by strong interactions. By using the supermoiré lattice occupancy as a probe of isospin symmetry, we observe an unexpected doubling of the miniband filling near ν=−2, possibly indicating a hidden phase transition or normal-state pairing proximal to the superconducting phase. Our work establishes supermoiré lattices as a tunable parameter for designing novel quantum phases and an effective tool for unraveling correlated phenomena in moiré materials.  

Hosted by Prof. Dr. Adrian Bachtold
Insight Seminar
May 9, 2024
INSIGHT SEMINAR: Strong interactions and isospin symmetry breaking in a supermoiré lattice 

Hour: From 15:00h to 16:00h

Place: Elements Room

INSIGHT SEMINAR: Strong interactions and isospin symmetry breaking in a supermoiré lattice 

AMIR YACOBY
Harvard University

BIO:

Amir Yacoby is a Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Harvard University. He received his bachelor’s degree in the field of Aerospace engineering and then transitioned into Physics. Following a Master’s degree in theoretical Physics, Yacoby received his PhD in experimental condensed matter physics in 1994 from the Weizmann Institute of Science.

Professor Yacoby is a member of the National Academy of Science, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fellow of the American Physical Society, member of the American Academy for Advancement of Science and an external member of the Max Planck Society.

Professor Yacoby works to develop new experimental techniques to explore quantum matter and uses these techniques to obtain new insights into their underlying quantum mechanical properties.

ABSTRACT:

In multilayer moiré heterostructures, the interference of multiple twist angles ubiquitously leads to tunable ultra-long-wavelength patterns known as supermoiré lattices. However, their impact on the system’s many-body electronic phase diagram remains largely unexplored. We present local compressibility measurements revealing numerous incompressible states resulting from supermoiré-lattice-scale isospin symmetry breaking driven by strong interactions. By using the supermoiré lattice occupancy as a probe of isospin symmetry, we observe an unexpected doubling of the miniband filling near ν=−2, possibly indicating a hidden phase transition or normal-state pairing proximal to the superconducting phase. Our work establishes supermoiré lattices as a tunable parameter for designing novel quantum phases and an effective tool for unraveling correlated phenomena in moiré materials.  

Hosted by Prof. Dr. Adrian Bachtold

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