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Nathan
Israeloff
Associate Professor
PhD University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1991
(617)373-2917
israeloff@neu.edu
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Research
Summary:
By
exploration of smaller and still smaller length scales,
much has been learned about the fundamental interactions
in nature. At the other extreme, condensed matter physicists
have studied the collective statistical behavior of large
numbers of particles. In a merging of these two approaches,
intermediate size systems with relatively small numbers
of atoms have recently been fabricated and studied. Novel
effects have been discovered in these so-called mesoscopic
systems. Traditionally these are samples of extremely
small volume. But model systems with enlarged "atoms",
such as vortices in superconducting networks, may suffice.
Recent advances in the understanding of disordered systems,
critical phenomena, and non-linear dynamics have also
made it irresistible to ask deeper questions about complexity.
Professor Israeloff's approach is to probe model complex
materials with novel mesoscopic techniques, with an emphasis
on noise measurements and analyses.
Experiments in progress or under development include mesoscopic
studies of superconducting, disordered, and biological
materials. The detailed dynamics of vortices in superconductors
and superconducting networks are of interest. The vortices
are localized regions of magnetic field penetration, around
which circulate super-currents. These vortices must be
pinned or nailed down, else they dissipate energy destroying
the superconductivity. Also of interest are exotic transitions
between the various fluid, crystalline, and glassy vortex
phases which have recently been discovered. Understanding
strongly driven motion of vortices may shed light on other
complex problems, such as friction, granular flow, invasion,
and charge transport. Strongly-driven vortex motion and
localization effects are currently being studied in artificially
disordered superconducting networks.
A full understanding of the transition between a liquid
and a disordered solid such as ordinary window glass remains
as a major unsolved problem in physics. The slow relaxation
of a glass toward equilibrium, though also poorly understood,
serves as a prototype for phenomena found in a wide variety
of complex systems such as neural networks, protein folding,
magnetic materials, and superconductors. Recent ideas
suggest the answers to these mysteries lie in the mesoscopic
regime. Using novel atomc force microscopy (AFM) techniques,
developed in his laboratory, mesoscopic scale (nanometer)
fluctuations in dielectric and viscoelastic properties
have been observed and are being investigated near the
glass transition. The techniques are also being developed
into non-invasive nano-scale probes of advanced integrated
circuits and materials.
Professor Israeloff's research is supported by the National
Science Foundation through an NSF Young Investigator award.
Recent Publications :
- Crider, P. S. & Israeloff, N. E. Imaging Nanoscale Spatio-Temporal Thermal Fluctuations. Nano Letters 6, 887-889 (2006).
- Sinnathamby, K. S., Oukris, H. & Israeloff, N. E. Local Polarization Fluctuations in an Aging Glass. Physical Review Letters 95, 067205 (2005).
- Vidal Russell, E. & Israeloff, N. E. Direct observation of molecular cooperativity near the glass transition. Nature 408, 695-698 (2000).
- Grigera, T. S. & Israeloff, N. E. Observation of Fluctuation-Dissipation-Theorem Violations in a Structural Glass. Physical Review Letters 83, 5038-5041 (1999).
- Russell, E. V., Israeloff, N. E., Walther, L. E. & Gomariz, H. A. Nanometer Scale Dielectric Fluctuations at the Glass Transition. Physical Review Letters 81, 1461-1464 (1998).
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