Volume 96, Issue 1 (partial) January - March 2024 | | Advertisement | In this year, 2024, 156 Outstanding Referees were selected from the 91,600 currently active referees. The honorees come from over 42 different countries and will be recognized at the upcoming March Meeting. Read more. | | | | | | Advertisement Register today to attend April Meeting 2024! Discover groundbreaking research from Quarks to Cosmos, connect with new collaborators and longtime colleagues, and prepare for career success at April Meeting 2024. Learn more about pricing and attendance options. | | | | | Advertisement Don't miss these exciting Physical Review Journals events at the 2024 APS March Meeting | | | Not an APS member? Join today to start connecting with a community of more than 50,000 physicists. | | | | Andrey Gromov and Leo Radzihovsky Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 011001 (2024) – Published 5 January 2024 | Fractons are exotic excitations originally conceived as platforms for reliable quantum memories. They are characterized by highly restricted mobilities. In the continuum, they are described by tensor fields with higher gauge symmetries. In this Colloquium, the focus is on a class of duality mappings between fracton models and elasticity theory, building the reader's intuition and understanding in a more familiar setting. | | | | | | Jin Wang, Ali Khosravi, Andrea Vanossi, and Erio Tosatti Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 011002 (2024) – Published 7 February 2024 | Friction at highly lubric interfaces of two-dimensional materials is important yet incompletely characterized. This Colloquium discusses sliding and pinning between two-dimensional layers, using simulations of twisted graphene interfaces as a prototypical system. The resulting insights are of potential relevance for a larger category of bilayer and multilayer systems as well. | | | | | | K. Pachucki, V. Lensky, F. Hagelstein, S. S. Li Muli, S. Bacca, and R. Pohl Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 015001 (2024) – Published 24 January 2024 | This article reviews recent literature and presents new calculations of the Lamb shift in light muonic atoms. Point-nucleus QED and nuclear structure effects are treated consistently among all muonic and electronic atoms to allow for improved determination of nuclear charge radii and fundamental constants. | | | | | | Fubao Yang, Zeren Zhang, Liujun Xu, Zhoufei Liu, Peng Jin, Pengfei Zhuang, Min Lei, Jinrong Liu, Jian-Hua Jiang, Xiaoping Ouyang, Fabio Marchesoni, and Jiping Huang Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 015002 (2024) – Published 14 February 2024 | Metamaterials are artificially patterned structures designed to behave as artificial materials with novel properties. A popular application is controlling electromagnetic waves with subwavelength patterning, leading to properties like negative indices of refraction. Metamaterials can also control diffusion processes, which are different from wave propagation. This review describes metamaterials in diffusive systems in terms of their underlying physics, the theory used to describe them, and their potential applications in areas such as heat management, drug transport, and particle separation. | | | | | | Fabio Boschini, Marta Zonno, and Andrea Damascelli Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 015003 (2024) – Published 27 February 2024 | Time-resolved angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy provides access to light-induced changes in the electronic band structure and interactions of solids, and to the out-of-equilibrium electron dynamics. This article reviews the history and future prospects for the development of the technique, and offers an overview of recent achievements in studying unoccupied and light-driven states, photoinduced phase transitions, electron-phonon scattering, and electron dynamics in quantum materials, including topological insulators, unconventional superconductors, traditional and novel semiconductors, excitonic insulators, and spin-textured systems. | | | | | | S. S. Harilal, M. C. Phillips, D. H. Froula, K. K. Anoop, R. C. Issac, and F. N. Beg Rev. Mod. Phys. 96, 019901 (2024) – Published 21 February 2024 | | | | |
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