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Observing Atomic Collapse Resonances in Artificial Nuclei on Graphene
2013
Science
Relativistic quantum mechanics predicts that when the charge of a superheavy atomic nucleus surpasses a certain threshold, the resulting strong Coulomb field causes an unusual atomic collapse state; this state exhibits an electron wave function component that falls toward the nucleus, as well as a positron component that escapes to infinity. In graphene, where charge carriers behave as massless relativistic particles, it has been predicted that highly charged impurities should exhibit
doi:10.1126/science.1234320
pmid:23470728
fatcat:nchugkdir5gbfpfpxaq2j7xjim