EDITORIAL

    Editorial: Coauthor! Coauthor!

    May 21, 2024

    When determining the authorship list for your next paper, be generous yet disciplined.


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    ANNOUNCEMENT

    50 Years of QCD

    October 11, 2023

    A new Collection by the Physical Review journals celebrates the 50th anniversary of the discovery of asymptotic freedom in quantum chromodynamics (QCD)—the theoretical basis for the strong force of nature that binds quarks and gluons into hadrons.


    ANNOUNCEMENT

    APS and Astrobites Announce Partnership

    October 25, 2023

    The American Physical Society (APS) is pleased to announce that it will begin sponsoring Astrobites, a daily astrophysical literature journal written by graduate students in astronomy. This mutually beneficial collaboration aims to enhance the dissemination of research, educational resources, and career insights in the field of astronomy and astrophysics.


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    PERSPECTIVE

    Reversible to irreversible transitions in periodic driven many-body systems and future directions for classical and quantum systems

    Reversible to irreversible (R-IR) transitions have been found in a wide variety of both soft and hard matter periodically driven collectively interacting systems that, after a certain number of driving cycles, organize into either a reversible state where the particle trajectories repeat during every or every few cycles or into a chaotic motion state. An overview of R-IR transitions including recent advances in the field is followed by a discussion of how the general framework of R-IR transitions could be applied to a much broader class of nonequilibrium systems in which periodic driving occurs, including not only soft and hard condensed matter systems, but also astrophysics, biological systems, and social systems.

    C. Reichhardt et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 5, 021001 (2023)


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    LETTER

    Morphological instability at topological defects in a three-dimensional vertex model for spherical epithelia

    The mechanics of spherical epithelial sheets like cysts or intestinal organoids can be described by a three-dimensional vertex model. The vertex model is coarse grained to an elastic continuum theory of bent thin sheets. A morphological instability at topological defects is found in the vertex model and quantitatively explained through buckling within the continuum theory.

    Oliver M. Drozdowski and Ulrich S. Schwarz
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022045 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Entropy production and thermodynamic inference for stochastic microswimmers

    Microswimmers are driven by a nonequilibrium chemical cycle. Using a thermodynamically consistent model with full hydrodynamics, it is shown that external forces affect their motion not only by passively dragging them but also by influencing their active swimming through the same mechanochemical coupling that allows them to swim, suggesting a strategy for the experimental inference of the chemical forces that drive them.

    Michalis Chatzittofi, Jaime Agudo-Canalejo, and Ramin Golestanian
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022044 (2024)


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    EDITORS' SUGGESTION

    Data-driven analysis of annual rain distributions

    A method for predicting annual rain distributions, based on combining monthly rain histograms from historical data, is introduced and applied to several locations in Israel. It is then argued (using tests of the method in a simple toy model) that the method gives reliable predictions not only for typical events but also for rare ones.

    Yosef Ashkenazy and Naftali R. Smith
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, 023187 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Universality of phenotypic distributions in bacteria

    A study reveals that division time distributions in proliferating cells vary in shape across experiments, unlike the universally consistent cell size distributions. This variation is influenced by the robustness of the corresponding shape factors in model parameter space.

    Kuheli Biswas and Naama Brenner
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022043 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Magnon-mediated topological superconductivity in a quantum wire

    One-dimensional p-wave superconductors can reside in a topological phase and are predicted to host non-Abelian states at their ends. It is shown that attractive interactions mediated by magnons can induce intrinsic triplet superconductivity in an electronic chain in proximity to a spin spiral, and combined with the effects from coupling to the static spin spiral the magnon-mediated interaction stabilizes a topological superconducting phase.

    Florinda Viñas Boström and Emil Viñas Boström
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022042 (2024)


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    EDITORS' SUGGESTION

    Fano resonance in excitation spectroscopy and cooling of an optically trapped single atom

    Cooling by electromagnetically induced transparency is experimentally demonstrated with an optically trapped single neutral atom. The Fano resonance feature is resolved in the fluorescence excitation spectra and the temperature profiles.

    Chang Hoong Chow, Boon Long Ng, Vindhiya Prakash, and Christian Kurtsiefer
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, 023154 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Quadratic acceleration of multistep probabilistic algorithms for state preparation

    For quantum state preparation, a nonunitary operator that decays unwanted states contained in an initial state is probabilistically realized on a quantum computer. Combining quantum amplitude amplification with multistep probabilistic algorithms is proposed, leading to quadratic speedup and quantum advantages in quantum state preparation.

    Hirofumi Nishi, Taichi Kosugi, Yusuke Nishiya, and Yu-ichiro Matsushita
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022041 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Realization of high-fidelity unitary operations on up to 64 frequency bins

    Integrated linear optical networks encoded in frequency bins are realized in a dispersion-engineered nonlinear optical waveguide. The network is scalable and will serve as basis for quantum information technologies thanks to high fidelities, free reconfigurability, and full connectivity.

    Syamsundar De et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022040 (2024)


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    EDITORS' SUGGESTION

    Single file motion of robot swarms

    A robot swarm is used to simulate single-lane traffic, identifying three different states: free flow, intermittent, and totally congested. The stability and repeatability of these agents, which become a suitable model of programmable active-matter systems, is showcased.

    Laciel Alonso-Llanes, Angel Garcimartín, and Iker Zuriguel
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022037 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Broken seniority symmetry in the semimagic proton mid-shell nucleus Rh95

    In semimagic nuclei, a broken pair of nucleons generate a characteristic regular pattern in energy and transition rates for protons and neutrons residing in the same orbital of the open shell. Lifetime measurement in 4595Rh nucleus shows a deviation from this pattern in the g9/2 orbital of the open proton shell.

    B. Das et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022038 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Quantum work: Reconciling quantum mechanics and thermodynamics

    The claim that no quantum work measurement satisfies standard physical principles has raised compatibility concerns between quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, and the classical limit. A revised framework is presented for addressing the classical limit, and it is shown that work defined as a quantum observable aligns quantum work statistics with thermodynamic principles.

    Thales A. B. Pinto Silva and David Gelbwaser-Klimovsky
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022036 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Effects of higher-order Casimir-Polder interactions on Rydberg atom spectroscopy

    Higher-order Casimir-Polder interactions between highly excited Rydberg atoms and macroscopic surfaces are studied, providing calculations of a term that evolves with the inverse fifth power of the atom-surface distance. The effects of this higher-order term in Casimir-Polder thin-cell spectroscopy are also investigated.

    B. Dutta et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022035 (2024)


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    EDITORS' SUGGESTION

    Quick charging of a quantum battery with superposed trajectories

    How to quick charge a quantum battery by using superposition of trajectories is shown. The proposed charging protocols have been verified on IBMQ and IonQ quantum processors.

    Po-Rong Lai et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, 023136 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Efficient survival strategy for zooplankton in turbulence

    Zooplankton reduce their vulnerability to predation by evading high-strain areas. A robust strategy for how such microswimmers can navigate by sensing hydromechanical signals to steer clear of high-strain regions in turbulent environments has been identified.

    N. Mousavi et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022034 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Protection of correlation-induced phase instabilities by exceptional susceptibilities

    At thermal equilibrium, generalized susceptibilities encoding the static physical response of Hermitian many-electron systems are shown to possess inherent non-Hermitian matrix symmetries, leading to the generic occurrence of exceptional points. In strongly correlated electron systems, such exceptional points are found to necessarily promote electronic charge instabilities that occur in the proximity of a Mott transition to a topologically robust phenomenon.

    M. Reitner et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022031 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Prospects for thermalization of microwave-shielded ultracold molecules

    Understanding collisional thermalization among ultracold molecules is essential to achieving quantum degenerate gases with evaporative cooling. A theoretical technique for efficiently handling thermalization calculations with nonuniversal dipolar scattering is demonstrated, providing a widely applicable tool for exploring optimal evaporation protocols.

    Reuben R. W. Wang and John L. Bohn
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022033 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Uncovering the multifractality of Lagrangian pair dispersion in shock-dominated turbulence

    For strongly compressible shock-dominated turbulence, a heuristic theoretical framework, which shows that the statistics of pair dispersion of Lagrangian tracer particles is different from its counterpart for incompressible-fluid turbulence, is developed. The trapping of Lagrangian particles in shocks is responsible for this difference, as is shown by extensive direct numerical simulations of the randomly forced two-dimensional Burgers equation, which models shock-dominated turbulence.

    Sadhitro De, Dhrubaditya Mitra, and Rahul Pandit
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022032 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Superfluid transition of a ferromagnetic Bose gas

    The physics of superfluidity of spin-1 Bose gas shares many similarities with that of multicomponent superconductivity, and it has been suspected that a strongly ferromagnetic Bose gas (such as 7Li) may realize the elusive high-order symmetry-breaking state proposed in superconductors. It is theoretically shown that the dilute Bose gas doesn’t exhibit such states, but the strong ferromagnetism does drive a joint first-order superfluid transition, contrary to a second-order one in the mean-field prediction.

    Pye Ton How and Sungkit Yip
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022030 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Correlation dimension of natural language in a statistical manifold

    The complexity of human languages is explored through the lens of fractal geometry and large language models, uncovering a multifractal structure. A universal correlation dimension of approximately 6.5 is identified in literary texts written in four languages, a phenomenon that appears to stem from the presence of long memory in these texts.

    Xin Du and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022028 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Non-Markovian gene expression

    A prototypical two-state gene-expression model is investigated, where the activation process has a fat-tailed (nonexponential) waiting time distribution, resulting in nonstationary dynamics and emerging nonergodicity.

    Ohad Vilk, Ralf Metzler, and Michael Assaf
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022026 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Optical Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations in two-dimensional electron systems

    Subterahertz transmittance of two-dimensional systems reveals the complexity of optical Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations featuring “universal” nodes at overtones of the cyclotron resonance as well as “tunable” nodes at positions sensitive to all parameters of the structure.

    M. L. Savchenko et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022027 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Chern mosaic and ideal flat bands in equal-twist trilayer graphene

    In the helical twisted trilayer graphene with equal twist angles, a hexagonal mosaic pattern spanning the moiré-of-moiré length scale and featuring alternating ±1 Chern numbers in each block is revealed.

    Daniele Guerci, Yuncheng Mao, and Christophe Mora
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022025 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Active thermodynamic force driven mitochondrial alignment

    How do mitochondria align at almost regular intervals in nerve axons? The mechanism is deciphered as the mitochondria employing the noise depending on the ATP, similar to the thermodynamic force.

    Masashi K. Kajita, Yoshiyuki Konishi, and Tetsuhiro S. Hatakeyama
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022024 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Demonstrating quantum computation for quasiparticle band structures

    The first-principles calculation of a quasiparticle band structure on actual quantum computers is demonstrated. This is achieved by hybrid quantum-classical algorithms in conjunction with qubit-reduction and error-mitigation techniques.

    Takahiro Ohgoe et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022022 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Observation of quantum metric and non-Hermitian Berry curvature in a plasmonic lattice

    The full quantum geometric tensor (QGT) is experimentally obtained for a plasmonic lattice. The quantum metric and the Berry curvature, related to the real and imaginary parts of the QGT, respectively, are found to be nonzero along the diagonals of the Brillouin zone, even for a trivial square lattice. While the quantum metric emerges from the interplay of polarization and the mode structure, the origin of the Berry curvature is purely non-Hermitian due to the system losses.

    Javier Cuerda et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022020 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Hayden-Preskill recovery in Hamiltonian systems

    Not all quantum chaos scrambles quantum information: While the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model does, typical chaotic spin chains do not.

    Yoshifumi Nakata and Masaki Tezuka
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022021 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Supercurrent noise in a phase-biased superconductor-normal ring in thermal equilibrium

    The supercurrent noise in the equilibrium state induced by thermal fluctuations of the phase-coherent Andreev bound states in a mesoscopic superconductor-normal ring is directly observed and the fluctuation-dissipation relation in such a system is experimentally confirmed.

    Ziwei Dou et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022023 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Active jamming at criticality

    The onset of athermal jamming is argued to be a critical phenomenon describable by a mean-field theory in physical dimensions. By elucidating the scaling behavior of jammed systems subjected to active forces and thermal fluctuations in the vicinity of the jamming onset, it’s shown that the physics of active jamming remains mean-field-like in contrast with active systems in which anomalous scaling behavior is the norm.

    Shalabh K. Anand, Chiu Fan Lee, and Thibault Bertrand
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022018 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Epidemic criticality in temporal networks

    The phenomenon of epidemic criticality in temporal networks is remarkably complex due to the competition between the network correlation effect (the persistence of links in the network) and the dynamic correlation effect (the tendency of infected nodes to group together).

    Chao-Ran Cai, Yuan-Yuan Nie, and Petter Holme
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022017 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Stacked tree construction for free-fermion projected entangled pair states

    A direct construction for the projected entangled pair states representation of states that admit descriptions in terms of exponentially localized Wannier functions is proposed. The construction involves first obtaining a tree tensor network construction for subregions, then stacking the tree tensor networks, and finally compressing local tensors successively.

    Yuman He, Kangle Li, Yanbai Zhang, and Hoi Chun Po
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022016 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Vertical velocity of a small sphere in a sheared granular bed

    In a size-disperse granular shear flow, particles too small to be trapped in the absence of shear percolate more slowly with increasing shear rate because of their increased velocity fluctuations, while small particles large enough to be trapped at zero shear are mobilized with increasing shear rate but eventually reach a maximum percolation speed and then slow down because of velocity fluctuations

    Song Gao (高颂), Julio M. Ottino, Richard M. Lueptow, and Paul B. Umbanhowar
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022015 (2024)


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    LETTER

    Temperature-induced miscibility of impurities in trapped Bose gases

    The behavior of an impurity in a trapped Bose gas at finite temperature is studied. It is observed that the impurity is expelled to the edge of the bath at low temperatures, while it remains at the center of the trap as temperature increases.

    G. Pascual et al.
    Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022014 (2024)


    Outstandingrefs2024

    APS Announces Outstanding Referees for 2024

    APS has selected 156 Outstanding Referees for 2024 who have demonstrated exceptional work in the assessment of manuscripts published in the Physical Review journals. A full list of the Outstanding Referees is available online.


    EDITORIAL

    Editorial: Introducing Perspective Articles

    April 18, 2022

    Three journals are excited to announce a new article type, “Perspectives,” to provide forward-looking views of cutting-edge science that has recently emerged or is enjoying renewed activity.

    Current Issue

    Vol. 6, Iss. 2 — April - June 2024

    View Current Issue

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    Announcements

    APS Announces Outstanding Referees for 2024
    March 1, 2024

    APS has selected 156 Outstanding Referees for 2024 who have demonstrated exceptional work in the assessment of manuscripts published in the Physical Review journals. A full list of the Outstanding Referees is available online.

    APS Partners with Research4Life
    December 15, 2023

    Offer includes Journal Access and waived article publication charges to Scientists in 100+ Lower and Middle Income Countries

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    Scope

    Physical Review Research welcomes papers from the full spectrum of research topics of interest to the physics community. Research coverage in the journal comprises: fundamental and applied; theoretical and experimental, including technical and methodological advances; and interdisciplinary and newly emerging areas.

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