Dirk van der Marel
University of Geneva
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dirk van der Marel.
Nature Physics | 2011
Iris Crassee; Julien Levallois; Andrew L. Walter; Markus Ostler; Eli Rotenberg; Thomas Seyller; Dirk van der Marel; A. B. Kuzmenko
The rotation of polarized light in certain materials when subject to a magnetic field is known as the Faraday effect. Remarkably, just one atomic layer of graphene exhibits Faraday rotations that would only be measurable in other materials many hundreds of micrometres thick.
Nature Communications | 2015
J. Teyssier; Suzanne V. Saenko; Dirk van der Marel; Michel C. Milinkovitch
Many chameleons, and panther chameleons in particular, have the remarkable ability to exhibit complex and rapid colour changes during social interactions such as male contests or courtship. It is generally interpreted that these changes are due to dispersion/aggregation of pigment-containing organelles within dermal chromatophores. Here, combining microscopy, photometric videography and photonic band-gap modelling, we show that chameleons shift colour through active tuning of a lattice of guanine nanocrystals within a superficial thick layer of dermal iridophores. In addition, we show that a deeper population of iridophores with larger crystals reflects a substantial proportion of sunlight especially in the near-infrared range. The organization of iridophores into two superposed layers constitutes an evolutionary novelty for chameleons, which allows some species to combine efficient camouflage with spectacular display, while potentially providing passive thermal protection.
Nature Communications | 2011
Claudio Giannetti; Federico Cilento; Stefano Dal Conte; Giacomo Coslovich; Gabriele Ferrini; Hajo Molegraaf; M. Raichle; Ruixing Liang; H. Eisaki; M. Greven; A. Damascelli; Dirk van der Marel; F. Parmigiani
In strongly correlated systems the electronic properties at the Fermi energy (EF) are intertwined with those at high-energy scales. One of the pivotal challenges in the field of high-temperature superconductivity (HTSC) is to understand whether and how the high-energy scale physics associated with Mott-like excitations (|E−EF|>1 eV) is involved in the condensate formation. Here, we report the interplay between the many-body high-energy CuO2 excitations at 1.5 and 2 eV, and the onset of HTSC. This is revealed by a novel optical pump-supercontinuum-probe technique that provides access to the dynamics of the dielectric function in Bi2Sr2Ca0.92Y0.08Cu2O8+δ over an extended energy range, after the photoinduced suppression of the superconducting pairing. These results unveil an unconventional mechanism at the base of HTSC both below and above the optimal hole concentration required to attain the maximum critical temperature (Tc).
BMC Biology | 2013
Suzanne V. Saenko; J. Teyssier; Dirk van der Marel; Michel C. Milinkovitch
BackgroundColor traits in animals play crucial roles in thermoregulation, photoprotection, camouflage, and visual communication, and are amenable to objective quantification and modeling. However, the extensive variation in non-melanic pigments and structural colors in squamate reptiles has been largely disregarded. Here, we used an integrated approach to investigate the morphological basis and physical mechanisms generating variation in color traits in tropical day geckos of the genus Phelsuma.ResultsCombining histology, optics, mass spectrometry, and UV and Raman spectroscopy, we found that the extensive variation in color patterns within and among Phelsuma species is generated by complex interactions between, on the one hand, chromatophores containing yellow/red pteridine pigments and, on the other hand, iridophores producing structural color by constructive interference of light with guanine nanocrystals. More specifically, we show that 1) the hue of the vivid dorsolateral skin is modulated both by variation in geometry of structural, highly ordered narrowband reflectors, and by the presence of yellow pigments, and 2) that the reflectivity of the white belly and of dorsolateral pigmentary red marks, is increased by underlying structural disorganized broadband reflectors. Most importantly, these interactions require precise colocalization of yellow and red chromatophores with different types of iridophores, characterized by ordered and disordered nanocrystals, respectively. We validated these results through numerical simulations combining pigmentary components with a multilayer interferential optical model. Finally, we show that melanophores form dark lateral patterns but do not significantly contribute to variation in blue/green or red coloration, and that changes in the pH or redox state of pigments provide yet another source of color variation in squamates.ConclusionsPrecisely colocalized interacting pigmentary and structural elements generate extensive variation in lizard color patterns. Our results indicate the need to identify the developmental mechanisms responsible for the control of the size, shape, and orientation of nanocrystals, and the superposition of specific chromatophore types. This study opens up new perspectives on Phelsuma lizards as models in evolutionary developmental biology.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Jason N. Hancock; Jacobus Lodevicus Martinu van Mechelen; A. B. Kuzmenko; Dirk van der Marel; Christoph Brüne; Elena G. Novik; G. V. Astakhov; H. Buhmann; L. W. Molenkamp
We present a magneto-optical study of the three-dimensional topological insulator, strained HgTe, using a technique which capitalizes on advantages of time-domain spectroscopy to amplify the signal from the surface states. This measurement delivers valuable and precise information regarding the surface-state dispersion within <1 meV of the Fermi level. The technique is highly suitable for the pursuit of the topological magnetoelectric effect and axion electrodynamics.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
S. I. Mirzaei; Damien Stricker; Jason N. Hancock; Christophe Berthod; Antoine Georges; Erik van Heumen; Mun Chan; X. Zhao; Yuan Li; M. Greven; Neven Barišić; Dirk van der Marel
Cuprate high-Tc superconductors exhibit enigmatic behavior in the nonsuperconducting state. For carrier concentrations near “optimal doping” (with respect to the highest Tcs) the transport and spectroscopic properties are unlike those of a Landau–Fermi liquid. On the Mott-insulating side of the optimal carrier concentration, which corresponds to underdoping, a pseudogap removes quasi-particle spectral weight from parts of the Fermi surface and causes a breakup of the Fermi surface into disconnected nodal and antinodal sectors. Here, we show that the near-nodal excitations of underdoped cuprates obey Fermi liquid behavior. The lifetime τ(ω, T) of a quasi-particle depends on its energy ω as well as on the temperature T. For a Fermi liquid, 1/τ(ω, T) is expected to collapse on a universal function proportional to (ℏω)2 + (pπkBT)2. Magneto-transport experiments, which probe the properties in the limit ω = 0, have provided indications for the presence of a T2 dependence of the dc (ω = 0) resistivity of different cuprate materials. However, Fermi liquid behavior is very much about the energy dependence of the lifetime, and this can only be addressed by spectroscopic techniques. Our optical experiments confirm the aforementioned universal ω- and T dependence of 1/τ(ω, T), with p ∼ 1.5. Our data thus provide a piece of evidence in favor of a Fermi liquid-like scenario of the pseudogap phase of the cuprates.
Physical Review B | 2014
Davide Forcella; Jan Zaanen; Davide Filippo Valentinis; Dirk van der Marel
We provide a general theoretical framework to describe the electromagnetic properties of viscous charged fluids, consisting for example of electrons in certain solids or plasmas. We confirm that finite viscosity leads to multiple modes of evanescent electromagnetic waves at a given frequency, one of which is characterized by a negative index of refraction, as previously discussed in a simplified model by one of the authors. In particular we explain how optical spectroscopy can be used to probe the viscosity. We concentrate on the impact of this on the coefficients of refraction and reflection at the sample-vacuum interface. Analytical expressions are obtained relating the viscosity parameter to the reflection and transmission coefficients of light. We demonstrate that finite viscosity has the effect to decrease the reflectivity of a metallic surface, while the electromagnetic field penetrates more deeply. While on a phenomenological level there are similarities to the anomalous skin effect, the model presented here requires no particular assumptions regarding the corpuscular nature of the charge liquid. A striking consequence of the branching phenomenon into two degenerate modes is the occurrence in a half-infinite sample of oscillations of the electromagnetic field intensity as a function of distance from the interface.
Physical Review B | 2008
J. Teyssier; Rolf Walter Lortz; Alexander Petrovic; Dirk van der Marel; V. B. Filippov; N. Shitsevalova
We report a detailed study of specific heat, electrical resistivity, and optical spectroscopy in the superconducting boride
Physical Review B | 2013
Christophe Berthod; Jernej Mravlje; Xiaoyu Deng; Rok Žitko; Dirk van der Marel; Antoine Georges
{\text{LuB}}_{12}
Physical Review B | 2014
Ana Akrap; J. Teyssier; Arnaud Magrez; Philippe Bugnon; Helmuth Berger; A. B. Kuzmenko; Dirk van der Marel