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      A modular ultra-high vacuum millikelvin scanning tunneling microscope

      1 , 1 , 2 , 1 , 1 , 3 , 1
      Review of Scientific Instruments
      AIP Publishing

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          Surface Studies by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

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            Direct Measurement of Quasiparticle-Lifetime Broadening in a Strong-Coupled Superconductor

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              High-resolution tunnelling spectroscopy of a graphene quartet.

              Electrons in a single sheet of graphene behave quite differently from those in traditional two-dimensional electron systems. Like massless relativistic particles, they have linear dispersion and chiral eigenstates. Furthermore, two sets of electrons centred at different points in reciprocal space ('valleys') have this dispersion, giving rise to valley degeneracy. The symmetry between valleys, together with spin symmetry, leads to a fourfold quartet degeneracy of the Landau levels, observed as peaks in the density of states produced by an applied magnetic field. Recent electron transport measurements have observed the lifting of the fourfold degeneracy in very large applied magnetic fields, separating the quartet into integer and, more recently, fractional levels. The exact nature of the broken-symmetry states that form within the Landau levels and lift these degeneracies is unclear at present and is a topic of intense theoretical debate. Here we study the detailed features of the four quantum states that make up a degenerate graphene Landau level. We use high-resolution scanning tunnelling spectroscopy at temperatures as low as 10 mK in an applied magnetic field to study the top layer of multilayer epitaxial graphene. When the Fermi level lies inside the fourfold Landau manifold, significant electron correlation effects result in an enhanced valley splitting for even filling factors, and an enhanced electron spin splitting for odd filling factors. Most unexpectedly, we observe states with Landau level filling factors of 7/2, 9/2 and 11/2, suggestive of new many-body states in graphene.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Review of Scientific Instruments
                Review of Scientific Instruments
                AIP Publishing
                0034-6748
                1089-7623
                February 01 2020
                February 01 2020
                : 91
                : 2
                : 023703
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Joseph Henry Laboratories and Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
                [2 ]Department of Physics, Chung-Ang University, Seoul 06974, South Korea
                [3 ]Oxford Instruments, Tubney Woods, Abingdon, Oxfordshire OX13 5QX, United Kingdom
                Article
                10.1063/1.5132872
                65b8c46f-043c-47bd-a6c3-60a52e49f89f
                © 2020

                https://publishing.aip.org/authors/rights-and-permissions

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