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Dive into the research topics where Kirk Baldwin is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirk Baldwin.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Commensurability Oscillations of Composite Fermions Induced by the Periodic Potential of a Wigner Crystal

H. Deng; Y.-Y. Liu; Insun Jo; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin; Mansour Shayegan

When the kinetic energy of a collection of interacting two-dimensional (2D) electrons is quenched at very high magnetic fields so that the Coulomb repulsion dominates, the electrons are expected to condense into an ordered array, forming a quantum Wigner crystal (WC). Although this exotic state has long been suspected in high-mobility 2D electron systems at very low Landau level fillings (ν << 1), its direct observation has been elusive. Here we present a new technique and experimental results that directly probe the magnetic-field-induced WC. We measure the magneto-resistance of a bilayer electron system with unequal layer densities at high magnetic fields. One layer has a very low density and is in the WC regime (ν << 1), while the other (”probe”) layer is near ν = 1/2 and hosts a sea of composite fermions, quasi-particles formed by attaching two flux-quanta to each interacting electron. The composite fermions feel the periodic electric potential of the WC in the other layer and exhibit magneto-resistance maxima whenever their cyclotron orbit encircles certain integer number of the WC lattice points. The positions of the maxima reveal that the WC has a triangular lattice and yield a direct measure of its lattice constant. Our results provide a striking example of how one can probe an exotic many-body state of 2D electrons using equally exotic quasi-particles of another many-body state.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Composite fermions with tunable Fermi contour anisotropy.

D. Kamburov; Yang Liu; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin

The composite fermion formalism elegantly describes some of the most fascinating behaviors of interacting two-dimensional carriers at low temperatures and in strong perpendicular magnetic fields. In this framework, carriers minimize their energy by attaching two flux quanta and forming new quasiparticles, the so-called composite fermions. Thanks to the flux attachment, when a Landau level is half-filled, the composite fermions feel a vanishing effective magnetic field and possess a Fermi surface with a well-defined Fermi contour. Our measurements in a high-quality two-dimensional hole system confined to a GaAs quantum well demonstrate that a parallel magnetic field can significantly distort the hole-flux composite fermion Fermi contour.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Even-denominator Fractional Quantum Hall Effect at a Landau Level Crossing

Yang Liu; Sukret Hasdemir; D. Kamburov; Aurelius Graninger; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; Ken West; Kirk Baldwin; R. Winkler

The fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE), observed in two-dimensional (2D) charged particles at high magnetic fields, is one of the most fascinating, macroscopic manifestations of a many-body state stabilized by the strong Coulomb interaction. It occurs when the filling factor (


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Fractional quantum Hall effect and Wigner crystal of interacting composite fermions.

Yang Liu; D. Kamburov; Sukret Hasdemir; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin

\nu


Physical Review B | 2013

Evidence for a ν = 5 / 2 fractional quantum Hall nematic state in parallel magnetic fields

Yang Liu; Sukret Hasdemir; M. Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin

) of the quantized Landau levels (LLs) is a fraction which, with very few exceptions, has an odd denominator. In 2D systems with additional degrees of freedom it is possible to cause a crossing of the LLs at the Fermi level. At and near these crossings, the FQHE states are often weakened or destroyed. Here we report the observation of an unusual crossing of the two \emph{lowest-energy} LLs in high-mobility GaAs 2D


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Composite Fermions with a Warped Fermi Contour

M. A. Mueed; D. Kamburov; Yang Liu; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin; R. Winkler

hole


Nature Communications | 2014

Microwave spectroscopic observation of distinct electron solid phases in wide quantum wells.

A. T. Hatke; Yang Liu; B. A. Magill; B. H. Moon; L. W. Engel; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin

systems which brings to life a new \emph{even-denominator} FQHE at


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Zero-bias anomalies in narrow tunnel junctions in the quantum Hall regime

P. Jiang; Chih-Chun Chien; I. Yang; W. Kang; Kirk Baldwin; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West

\nu=1/2


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Interplay between Quantum Well Width and Interface Roughness for Electron Transport Mobility in GaAs Quantum Wells

D. Kamburov; Kirk Baldwin; K. W. West; Mansour Shayegan; Loren Pfeiffer

.


Science | 2017

Full momentum- and energy-resolved spectral function of a 2D electronic system

Joonho Jang; Heun Mo Yoo; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West; Kirk Baldwin; R. C. Ashoori

In two-dimensional electron systems confined to GaAs quantum wells, as a function of either tilting the sample in a magnetic field or increasing density, we observe multiple spin-polarization transitions of the fractional quantum Hall states at filling factors ν=4/5 and 5/7. The number of observed transitions provides evidence that these are fractional quantum Hall states of interacting two-flux composite fermions. Moreover, the fact that the reentrant integer quantum Hall effect near ν=4/5 always develops following the transition to full spin polarization of the ν=4/5 fractional quantum Hall state links the reentrant phase to a pinned ferromagnetic Wigner crystal of composite fermions.

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Yang Liu

Princeton University

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Ken West

Princeton University

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R. Winkler

Northern Illinois University

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