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<strong>In what could shape the future quantum computation, Indian physicists have detected counter propagating channels in two layered Graphene along which certain neutral quasiparticles move in opposite directions breaking conventional norms.</strong></p>
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A new study conducted by researchers from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and supported by Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), a statutory body under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), has provided &#39;smoking gun&#39; evidence for the presence of upstream modes along which certain neutral quasiparticles move in two-layered graphene.</p>
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<img alt="quantum" src="https://www.indianarrative.com/upload/news/quantam.webp" style="width: 100%; height: 100%;" /><br />
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To detect these modes or channels, the team used a novel method employing electrical noise &ndash; fluctuations in the output signal caused by heat dissipation.<br />
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When a strong magnetic field is applied to a 2D material or gas, the electrons at the interface &ndash; unlike the ones within the bulk &ndash; are free to move along the edges in what are called edge modes or channels &ndash; somewhat similar to highway lanes.&nbsp; This phenomenon called the quantum Hall effect has given rise to a platform for hosting exotic emerging quasiparticles, with properties that could lead to exciting applications in the area of quantum computing.<br />
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This edge movement, which is the essence of the quantum Hall effect, can lead to many interesting properties depending on the material and conditions.</p>
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<img alt="quantum" src="https://www.indianarrative.com/upload/news/quantam1.webp" style="width: 100%; height: 100%;" /><br />
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For conventional electrons, the current flows only in one direction dictated by the magnetic field (downstream). However, physicists had earlier predicted that some materials can have counter-propagating channels where some quasiparticles can also travel in the opposite (upstream) direction. However, these channels have been extremely difficult to identify because they do not carry any electrical current.<br />
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&quot;Though the upstream excitations are charge-neutral, they can carry heat energy and produce a noise spot along the upstream direction,&quot; explains Anindya Das, Associate Professor in the Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science, and corresponding author of the study which has been published in the journal &#39;Nature Communications&#39;.</p>
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<img alt="quantum" src="https://www.indianarrative.com/upload/news/quantam2.webp" style="width: 100%; height: 100%;" /><br />
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In the current study, when the researchers applied an electrical potential to the edge of two-layered graphene, they found that heat was transported only in the upstream channels and dissipated at certain &#39;hotspots&#39; in that direction. At these spots, the heat generated electrical noise could be picked up by an electrical resonance circuit and spectrum analyzer.<br />
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&quot;The detection of upstream modes is critical for the emergent modes with exotic quantum statistics, which has potential to shape the future flaunt-tolerant quantum computation,&quot; said Das.&nbsp;</p>
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Indian physicists shape future quantum computation by detecting neutral electron flow in Graphene
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