Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]
16
One nice bit of condensed matter/nanoscale physics news:  This year's Wolf Prize in Physics has gone to three outstanding scientists, Jim Eisenstein, Moty Heiblum, and Jainendra Jain, each of whom have done very impactful work involving 2D electron gases - systems of electrons confined to move only in two dimensions by the electronic structure and alignment of energy bands at interfaces between semiconductors.  Of particular relevance to these folks are the particularly clean 2D electron gases at the interfaces between GaAs and AlGaAs, or in GaAs quantum wells embedded in AlGaAs. A thread that connects all three of these scientists is the fractional quantum Hall effect in these 2D systems.  Electrons confined to move in 2D, in the presence of a magnetic field perpendicular to the plane of motion, form a remarkable system.  The quantum wavefunction of an electron in this situation changes as the magnetic induction \(B\) is increased.  The energy levels of such an electron are given by...
a month ago

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from nanoscale views

Science updates - brief items

Here are a couple of neat papers that I came across in the last week.  (Planning to write something about multiferroics as well, once I have a bit of time.) The idea of directly extracting useful energy from the rotation of the earth sounds like something out of an H. G. Wells novel.  At a rough estimate (and it's impressive to me that AI tools are now able to provide a convincing step-by-step calculation of this; I tried w/ gemini.google.com) the rotational kinetic energy of the earth is about \(2.6 \times 10^{29}\) J.  The tricky bit is, how do you get at it?  You might imagine constructing some kind of big space-based pick-up coil and getting some inductive voltage generation as the earth rotates its magnetic field past the coil.  Intuitively, though, it seems like while sitting on the (rotating) earth, you should in some sense be comoving with respect to the local magnetic field, so it shouldn't be possible to do anything clever that way.  It turns out, though, that Lorentz forces still apply when moving a wire through the axially symmetric parts of the earth's field.  This has some conceptual contact with Faraday's dc electric generator.   With the right choice of geometry and materials, it is possible to use such an approach to extract some (tiny at the moment) power.  For the theory proposal, see here.  For an experimental demonstration, using thermoelectric effects as a way to measure this (and confirm that the orientation of the cylindrical shell has the expected effect), see here.  I need to read this more closely to decide if I really understand the nuances of how it works. On a completely different note, this paper came out on Friday.  (Full disclosure:  The PI is my former postdoc and the second author was one of my students.)  It's an impressive technical achievement.  We are used to the fact that usually macroscopic objects don't show signatures of quantum interference.  Inelastic interactions of the object with its environment effectively suppress quantum interference effects on some time scale (and therefore some distance scale).  Small molecules are expected to still show electronic quantum effects at room temperature, since they are tiny and their electronic levels are widely spaced, and here is a review of what this could do in electronic measurements.  Quantum interference effects should also be possible in molecular vibrations at room temperature, and they could manifest themselves through the vibrational thermal conduction through single molecules, as considered theoretically here.  This experimental paper does a bridge measurement to compare the thermal transport between a single-molecule-containing junction between a tip and a surface, and an empty (farther spaced) twin tip-surface geometry.  They argue that they see differences between two kinds of molecules that originate from such quantum interference effects. As for more global issues about the US research climate, there will be more announcements soon about reductions in force and the forthcoming presidential budget request.  (Here is an online petition regarding the plan to shutter the NIST atomic spectroscopy group.)  Please pay attention to these issues, and if you're a US citizen, I urge you to contact your legislators and make your voice heard.

a week ago 12 votes
March Meeting 2025, Day 4 and wrap-up

I saw a couple of interesting talks this morning before heading out: Alessandro Chiesa of Parma spoke about using spin-containing molecules potentially as qubits, and about chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) in electron transfer.  Regarding the former, here is a review.  Spin-containing molecules can have interesting properties as single qubits, or, for spins higher than 1/2, qudits, with unpaired electrons often confined to a transition metal or rare earth ion somewhat protected from the rest of the universe by the rest of the molecule.  The result can be very long coherence times for their spins.  Doing multi-qubit operations is very challenging with such building blocks, however.  There are some theory proposals and attempts to couple molecular qubits to superconducting resonators, but it's tough!   Regarding chiral induced spin selectivity, he discused recent work trying to use molecules where a donor region is linked to an acceptor region via a chiral bridge, and trying to manipulate spin centers this way.  A question in all the CISS work is, how can the effects be large when spin-orbit coupling is generally very weak in light, organic molecules?  He has a recent treatment of this, arguing that if one models the bridge as a chain of sites with large \(U/t\), where \(U\) is the on-site repulsion energy and \(t\) is the hopping contribution, then exchange processes between sites can effectively amplify the otherwise weak spin-orbit effects.  I need to read and think more about this. Richard Schlitz of Konstanz gave a nice talk about some pretty recent research using a scanning tunneling microscope tip (with magnetic iron atoms on the end) to drive electron paramagnetic resonance in a single pentacene molecule (sitting on MgO on Ag, where it tends to grab an electron from the silver and host a spin).  The experimental approach was initially explained here.  The actual polarized tunneling current can drive the resonance, and exactly how depends on the bias conditions.  At high bias, when there is strong resonant tunneling, the current exerts a damping-like torque, while at low bias, when tunneling is far off resonance, the current exerts a field-like torque.  Neat stuff. Leah Weiss from Chicago gave a clear presentation about not-yet-published results (based on earlier work), doing optically detected EPR of Er-containing molecules.  These condense into mm-sized molecular crystals, with the molecular environment being nice and clean, leading to very little inhomogeneous broadening of the lines.  There are spin-selective transitions that can be driven using near telecom-wavelength (1.55 \(\mu m\)) light.  When the (anisotropic) \(g\)-factors of the different levels are different, there are some very promising ways to do orientation-selective and spin-selective spectroscopy.  Looking forward to seeing the paper on this. And that's it for me for the meeting.  A couple of thoughts: I'm not sold on the combined March/April meeting.  Six years ago when I was a DCMP member-at-large, the discussion was all about how the March Meeting was too big, making it hard to find and get good deals on host sites, and maybe the meeting should split.  Now they've made it even bigger.  Doesn't this make planning more difficult and hosting more expensive since there are fewer options?  (I'm not an economist, but....)  A benefit for the April meeting attendees is that grad students and postdocs get access to the career/networking events held at the MM.  If you're going to do the combination, then it seems like you should have the courage of your convictions and really mingle the two, rather than keeping the March talks in the convention center and the April talks in site hotels. I understand that van der Waals/twisted materials are great laboratories for physics, and that topological states in these are exciting.  Still, by my count there were 7 invited sessions broadly about this topic, and 35 invited talks on this over four days seems a bit extreme.   By my count, there were eight dilution refrigerator vendors at the exhibition (Maybell, Bluefors, Ice, Oxford, Danaher/Leiden, Formfactor, Zero-Point Cryo, and Quantum Design if you count their PPMS insert).  Wow.   I'm sure there will be other cool results presented today and tomorrow that I am missing - feel free to mention them in the comments.

3 weeks ago 13 votes
March Meeting 2025, Day 3

Another busy day at the APS Global Physics Summit.  Here are a few highlights: Shahal Ilani of the Weizmann gave an absolutely fantastic talk about his group's latest results from their quantum twisting microscope.  In a scanning tunneling microscope, because tunneling happens at an atomic-scale location between the tip and the sample, the momentum in the transverse direction is not conserved - that is, the tunneling averages over a huge range of \(\mathbf{k}\) vectors for the tunneling electron.  In the quantum twisting microscope, electrons tunnel from a flat (graphite) patch something like \(d \sim\) 100 nm across, coherently, through a couple of layers of some insulator (like WSe2) and into a van der Waals sample.  In this case, \(\mathbf{k}\) in the plane is comparatively conserved, and by rotating the sample relative to the tip, it is possible to build up a picture of the sample's electronic energy vs. \(\mathbf{k}\) dispersion, rather like in angle-resolved photoemission.  This has allowed, e.g., mapping of phonons via inelastic tunneling.  His group has applied this to magic angle twisted bilayer graphene, a system that has a peculiar combination of properties, where in some ways the electrons act like very local objects, and in other ways they act like delocalized objects.  The answer seems to be that this system at the magic angle is a bit of an analog of a heavy fermion system, where there are sort of local moments (living in very flat bands) interacting and hybridizing with "conduction" electrons (bands crossing the Fermi level at the Brillouin zone center).  The experimental data (movies of the bands as a function of energy and \(\mathbf{k}\) in the plane as the filling is tuned via gate) are gorgeous and look very much like theoretical models. I saw a talk by Roger Melko about applying large language models to try to get efficient knowledge of many-body quantum states, or at least the possible outputs of evolution of a quantum system like a quantum computer based on Rydberg atoms.  It started fairly pedagogically, but I confess that I got lost in the AI/ML jargon about halfway through. Francis M. Ross, recipient of this year's Keithley Award, gave a great talk about using transmission electron microscopy to watch the growth of materials in real time.  She had some fantastic videos - here is a review article about some of the techniques used.  She also showed some very new work using a focused electron beam to make arrays of point defects in 2D materials that looks very promising. Steve Kivelson, recipient of this year's Buckley Prize, presented a very nice talk about his personal views on the theory of high temperature superconductivity in the cuprates.  One basic point:  these materials are balancing between multiple different kinds of emergent order (spin density waves, charge density waves, electronic nematics, perhaps pair density waves).   This magnifies the effects of quenched disorder, which can locally tip the balance one way or another.  Recent investigations of the famous 2D square lattice Hubbard model show this as well.  He argues that the ground state of the Hubbard model for a broad range \(1/2 < U/t < 8\), where \(U\) is the on-site repulsion and \(t\) is the hopping term, the ground state is in fact a charge density wave, not a superconductor.  However, if there is some amount of disorder in the form of \(\delta t/t \sim 0.1-0.2\), the result is a robust, unavoidable superconducting state.  He further argues that increasing the superconducting transition temperature requires striking a balance between the underdoped case (strong pairing, weak superfluid phase stiffness) and the overdoped case (weak pairing, strong superfluid stiffness), and that one way to achieve this would be in a bilayer with broken mirror symmetry (say different charge reservoir layers above and below, and/or a big displacement field perpendicular to the plane).  (Apologies for how technical that sounded - hard to reduce that one to something super accessible without writing much more.) A bit more tomorrow before I depart back to Houston.

3 weeks ago 12 votes
March Meeting 2025, Day 2

I spent a portion of today catching up with old friends and colleagues, so fewer highlights, but here are a couple: Like a few hundred other people, I went to the invited talk by Chetan Nayak, leader of Microsoft's quantum computing effort. It was sufficiently crowded that the session chair warned everyone about fire code regulations and that people should not sit on the floor blocking the aisles.  To set the landscape:  Microsoft's approach to quantum computing is to develop topological qubits based on interesting physics that is predicted to happen (see here and here) if one induces superconductivity (via the proximity effect) in a semiconductor nanowire with spin-orbit coupling.  When the right combination of gate voltage and external magnetic field is applied, the nanowire should cross into a topologically nontrivial state with majorana fermions localized to each end of the nanowire, leading to "zero energy states" seen as peaks in the conductance \(dI/dV\) centered at zero bias (\(V=0\)).  A major challenge is that disorder in these devices can lead to other sources of zero-bias peaks (Andreev bound states).  A 2023 paper outlines a protocol that is supposed to give good statistical feedback on whether a given device is in the topologically interesting or trivial regime.  I don't want to rehash the history of all of this.  In a paper published last month, a single proximitized, gate-defined InAs quantum wire is connected to a long quantum dot to form an interferometer, and the capacitance of that dot is sensed via RF techniques as a function of the magnetic flux threading the interferometer, showing oscillations with period \(h/2e\), interpreted as charge parity oscillations of the proximitized nanowire.  In new data, not yet reported in a paper, Nayak presented measurements on a system comprising two such wires and associated other structures.  The argument is that each wire can be individually tuned simultaneously into the topologically nontrivial regime via the protocol above.  Then interferometer measurements can be performed in one wire (the Z channel) and in a configuration involving two ends of different wires (the X channel), and they interpret their data as early evidence that they have achieved the desired majorana modes and their parity measurements.  I look forward to when a paper is out on this, as it is hard to make informed statements about this based just on what I saw quickly on slides from a distance.   In a completely different session, Garnet Chan gave a very nice talk about applying advanced quantum chemistry and embedding techniques to look at some serious correlated materials physics.  Embedding methods are somewhat reminiscent of mean field theories:  Instead of trying to solve the Schrödinger equation for a whole solid, for example, you can treat the solid as a self-consistent theory of a unit cell or set of unit cells embedded in a more coarse-grained bath (made up of other unit cells appropriately averaged).  See here, for example. He presented recent results on computing the Kondo effect of magnetic impurities in metals, understanding the trends of antiferromagnetic properties of the parent cuprates, and trying to describe superconductivity in the doped cuprates.  Neat stuff. In the same session, my collaborator Silke Buehler-Paschen gave a nice discussion of ways to use heavy fermion materials to examine strange metals, looking beyond just resistivity measurements.  Particularly interesting is the idea of trying to figure out quantum Fisher information, which in principle can tell you how entangled your many-body system is (that is, estimating how many other degrees of freedom are entangled with one particular degree of freedom).  See here for an intro to the idea, and here for an implementation in a strange metal, Ce3Pd20Si6.   More tomorrow.... (On a separate note, holy cow, the trade show this year is enormous - seems like it's 50% bigger than last year.  I never would have dreamed when I was a grad student that you could go to this and have your pick of maybe 10 different dilution refrigerator vendors.  One minor mystery:  Who did World Scientific tick off?  Their table is located on the completely opposite side of the very large hall from every other publisher.)

3 weeks ago 12 votes
March Meeting 2025, Day 1

The APS Global Physics Summit is an intimate affair, with a mere 14,000 attendees, all apparently vying for lunch capacity for about 2,000 people.   The first day of the meeting was the usual controlled chaos of people trying to learn the layout of the convention center while looking for talks and hanging out having conversations.  On the plus side, the APS wifi seems to function well, and the projectors and slide upload system are finally technologically mature (though the pointers/clickers seem to have some issues).  Some brief highlights of sessions I attended: I spent the first block of time at this invited session about progress in understanding quantum spin liquids and quantum spin ice.  Spin ices are generally based on the pyrochlore structure, where atoms hosting local magnetic moments sit at the vertices of corner-sharing tetrahedra, as I had discussed here.  The idea is that the crystal environment and interactions between spins are such that the moments are favored to satisfy the ice rules, where in each tetrahedron two moments point inward toward the center and two point outward.  Classically there are a huge number of spin arrangements that all have about the same ground state energy.  In a quantum spin ice, the idea is that quantum fluctuations are large, so that the true ground state would be some enormous superposition of all possible ice-rule-satistfying configurations.  One consequence of this is that there are low energy excitations that look like an emergent form of electromagnetism, including a gapless phonon-like mode.  Bruce Gaulin spoke about one strong candidate quantum spin ice, Ce2Zr2O7, in a very pedagogical talk that covered all this.  A relevant recent review is this one.   There were two other talks in the session also about pyrochlores, an experimentally focused one by Sylvain Petit discussing Tb2Ti2O7 (see here), and a theory talk by Yong-Baek Kim focused again on the cerium zirconate.    Also in the session was an interesting talk by Jeff Rau about K2IrCl6, a material with a completely different structure that (above its ordering temperature of 3 K) acts like a "nodal line spin liquid". In part because I had students speaking there, I also attended a contributed session about nanomaterials (wires, tubes, dots, particles, liquids).  There were some neat talks.  The one that I found most surprising was from the Cha group at Cornell, where they were using a method developed by the Schroer group at Yale (see here and here) to fabricate nanowires of two difficult to grow, topologically interesting metals, CoIn3 and RhIn3.  The idea is to create a template with an array of tubular holes, and squeeze that template against a bulk crystal of the desired material at around 350C, so that the crystal is extruded into the holes to form wires.  Then the template can be etched away and the wires recovered for study.  I'm amazed that this works. In the afternoon, I went back and forth between the very crowded session on fractional quantum anomalous Hall physics in stacked van der Waals materials, and a contributed session about strange metals.  Interesting stuff for sure. I'm still trying to figure out what to see tomorrow, but there will be another update in the evening.

3 weeks ago 12 votes

More in science

‘Paraparticles’ Would Be a Third Kingdom of Quantum Particle

A new proposal makes the case that paraparticles — a new category of quantum particle — could be created in exotic materials. The post ‘Paraparticles’ Would Be a Third Kingdom of Quantum Particle first appeared on Quanta Magazine

19 hours ago 2 votes
A Quest Nature Tour to Colombia's Central Andes

I have recently returned from an excellent tour to Colombia that I led for Quest Nature Tours. This was my third time guiding in Colombia, following excellent trips in 2020 and 2022. Those previous tours covered a lot of ground, in the eastern Andes near Bogotá, the Central Andes between Pereira and Medellín, and the Santa Marta Mountains and Guajira Desert located in the far north. This 2025 tour was different as we only focused on the Central Andes portion over ten days. This eliminated all of the internal flights, it cut down on driving time, and it allowed us to have more time to thoroughly explore each site. Following the main tour, I traveled to the Juan Solito Ecolodge in the northeast of the country with four of the travellers and our local guide Cris, where we had four nights in the llanos to search for a huge array of birds as well as other specialties of the region including Jaguar and Green Anaconda.  Crescent-faced Antpitta Andean Cock-of-the-Rock Bar-crested Antshrike Twelve enthusiastic travellers joined Cris and I in the town of La Florida, situated a short drive from the beautiful montane forests of Otún Quimbaya. As dawn broke, a Rufous-bellied Nighthawk flew over the clearing at El Cedral, and we experienced a delicious Colombian breakfast while listening to the dawn chorus. For the rest of the morning we marvelled at mixed bird flocks and enjoyed the high diversity of this region. The Cauca Guan is an endangered species found in a small region of the central Andes of Colombia, and we succeeded with amazing views of them. We also studied White-capped Tanagers, Red-ruffed Fruitcrows, Andean Motmots and Pale-eyed Thrushes, while mixed flocks contained the endemic Multicoloured Tanager and scarce flycatchers like the Variegated Bristle-Tyrant and Bronze-olive Pygmy-Tyrant. Meanwhile, Torrent Ducks were easily found along the Río Otún which was flowing quickly after the recent rains. A feast for the senses! Cauca Guans Vettius sp. Black Phoebe Andean Motmot Red-ruffed Fruitcrow Torrent Duck We moved on to a site just west of Manizales called Hotel Tinamú Birding Nature Reserve. This is a relatively new property that I had never visited before. It consists of regenerating dry forest in an area that formerly contained coffee plantations, and the species composition is much different than the humid montane forest we had just left at Otún Quimbaya. Our comfortable rooms were located in a clearing in the forest, and active tanager and hummingbird feeders could be enjoyed from our front porches.  Blue-gray Tanager Monarch (Danaus plexippus) Some of the bird specialties at Hotel Tinamú include a couple of localized species that have been trained to come into feeding stations - the Gray-headed Dove and Blue-lored Antbird (we succeeded with both). We found leks of Golden-collared Manakin and Green Hermit, while birding the road in scrubbier areas produced Colombian Speckle-breasted Wren, Bar-crested Antshrike, Ultramarine Grosbeak and, best of all, a quartet of Greyish Piculets (an endemic species to this valley) which provided incredible, "walk-away" views.  Blue-lored Antbird Streaked Flycatcher Grayish Piculets One evening, I set up my moth trap in the garden which produced a nice variety of moths, rove beetles, stone flies, leafhoppers, scarabs and much more! Unidentified leafhopper (family Cicadellidae) Eois camptographata Unidentified stonefly (family Perlidae) Unidentified leafhopper (family Cicadellidae) Pelidnota prasina Oxyptera laeta We moved eastwards towards the imposing Los Nevados National Park, where several volcanoes reach high above 4000 m in elevation. Before reaching these heights, we spent two days in montane forest at different elevations: Owl's Watch at around 2600 m, and Hacienda El Bosque at 3100 m. This gave our bodies time to acclimate to the elevation differences, while it also afforded us the chance to find a high diversity of birds that we wouldn't see elsewhere on the tour.  Hooded Mountain-Tanager Blue-capped Tanager At Owl's Watch we had amazing encounters with Black-billed Mountain-Toucans and an endemic Brown-banded Antpitta, both of which came into feeding stations. Though we dealt with persistent rain and fog this day, the birding was still very active with many species including White-throated Daggerbill, Rufous-crowned Tody-Flycatcher, a dozen hummingbird species and a recently-fledged White-capped Dipper. Black-billed Mountain-Toucan Long-tailed Sylph Rufous-crowned Tody-Flycatcher Hacienda El Bosque is a must-visit site for any birder in the Manizales area. This property was amazing during my first visit in 2020 and it has only been improved. The star of the show, a Crescent-faced Antpitta, is still attending a feeding station, as are Gray-breasted Mountain-Toucans, Equatorial Antpittas, Andean and Sickle-winged Guans, White-browed Spinetails, Barred Fruiteaters, Hooded Mountain-Tanagers and Grass Wrens, among other species! And to top it off, a new restaurant has been built at the upper elevations where we enjoyed one of the best lunches of the trip.  Crescent-faced Antpitta Gray-breasted Mountain-Toucan Gray-breasted Mountain-Toucan Sickle-winged Guan Grass Wren Yellow-bellied Chat-Tyrant Barred Fruiteater Hummingbird diversity was high and we observed the species with the longest bill (Sword-billed Hummingbird) and the shortest bill (Purple-backed Thornbill). A distant Andean Pygmy-Owl called from up the hillside and we found a nice mixed flock as well. We all came away with many highlights and photos from Hacienda El Bosque! Sword-billed Hummingbird Rufous-breasted Chat-Tyrant Our base for the next two nights was the picturesque Termales del Ruiz hotel, situated in the upper reaches of the cloud forest at 3500 m. Not only is this hotel conveniently located to explore Los Nevados National Park, but the hummingbird feeders are very active while the birding along the roadside can be excellent. And of course, going for a dip in the lovely waters of the hot springs feels fantastic after a day of birding. Tawny Antpitta   We lucked out with clear weather during our morning near the gates for the national park.  Overlooking Los Nevados National Park This was the highest elevation that we would see on this trip at 4138 m, and it is at this site where a unique hummingbird can be found. The Buffy Helmetcrest is a specialist of the páramo habitat and Los Nevados National Park is the only place in the world where it can be sought out. The temperatures are only a few degrees above freezing every single night of the year, and this solidly-built hummingbird can withstand these tough environmental conditions and even thrive in them. We experienced amazing views of a male Buffy Helmetcrest, along other high-elevation specialists like Andean Tit-Spinetail, Tawny Antpitta and Viridian Metaltail.  Buffy Helmetcrest We explored some other habitats slightly lower down on this mountain. An alpine lake held several Andean Teals and Andean Ducks, while we successfully called in a Páramo Tapaculo to the roadside, allowing great views for everyone. Mixed flocks in the higher montane forest held species like Blue-backed Conebill, Great Sapphirewing, Scarlet-bellied Mountain-Tanager and Crowned Chat-Tyrant, while we also heard Ocellated Tapaculos and Equatorial Antpittas. Unfortunately, the scarce Rufous-fronted Parakeets mostly eluded us, as we had a quick flyover in the fog and nothing more. The plant life in the páramo is surprisingly diverse and we encountered many interesting and showy species. Páramo Tapaculo Senecio formosus Barberry (Berberis sp.) Eccremocarpus viridis We left the cool temperatures of the high Andes behind and ventured northward along the Cauca Valley to the town of Jardín, our base for the next three nights. Situated on the eastern flank of the western Andes, the verdant, epiphyte-laden forest is one of the few strongholds of the endangered Yellow-eared Parrot. This species is an example of a conservation success story in Colombia. Mainly because of habitat restoration (including the regeneration of wax palms, its nesting tree) and an extensive education campaign, the numbers of this beautiful parrot have rebounded from just 81 known individuals in 1999 to around 2,600 individuals today. We were treated to great flyover views of at least 25 individuals; a welcome sight especially considering the previous low numbers of this species. We also succeeded with the endemic Chamí Antpitta as well as a Chestnut-naped Antpitta, while the meals that we were served by a local family at El Roble were some of the best of the trip!  Chestnut-naped Antpitta Chamí Antpitta Yellow-eared Parrots Buff-tailed Coronet The town of Jardín is also home to two avian spectacles that have to be seen to be believed. For several decades, a lekking ground for the Andean Cock-of-the-Rock has persisted on the outskirts of town. Males strut their stuff, showcasing their slick dance moves and outrageous plumage for the more subdued females. She watches quietly from her perch, her discerning eye picking the male that is most fit to be the father of her future offspring.  Watching this exhibition at arms-length was cited as a trip highlight for everyone.  Andean Cock-of-the-Rock Moustached Puffbird The other spectacle that we were lucky to witness was a nesting area for the Oilbird. The Oilbird is one of the strangest bird species found in the Neotropics. Though superficially resembling a nightjar, they are in fact the only living member of the family Steatornithidae as well as the order Steaornithiformes. Oilbirds are unique in that they are a nocturnal frugivore, while they also use a primitive form of echolocation! Oilbirds roost somewhere secluded during the day, often deep in a cave or within an inaccessible gorge next to a flowing river, and at night they get to work. Oilbirds fly around in search of lipid-rich oil palms or tropical laurel fruits. They are well-adapted to this as they possess extremely large, sensitive eyes, while they also produce audible clicking sounds which act as a sort of echolocation. Their behaviour is more like a fruit bat than any bird. Oilbirds Oilbirds Crossing the river near Jardín, Antioquia, Colombia To see these Oilbirds, we embarked on a long walk deep into the gorge of a montane river, then crossed the river via a swinging bridge (while using a safety harness) to get to the site opposite the Oilbird nests. In case you were wondering, the nests are made entirely out of bird droppings. It was a privilege to spend some time near these unique birds! At this site we also enjoyed a very productive feeder setup that hosted several other endemic Colombian birds - the Red-bellied Grackle and Colombian Chachalaca.  Red-bellied Grackle Green Jay Colombian Chachalaca On our final day of the tour we began with a morning of exploration in the dry forests next to the Cauca River near the town of Bolombolo. The species composition here was different, yet again. We had two main bird targets here, both being endemic species to this valley, including the Apical Flycatcher and Antioquia Wren. We succeeded with both while we also found Scarlet-fronted Parakeet, Moustached Puffbird, Black-striped Sparrow and Greyish Piculet, along with dozens of butterflies.  Apical Flycatcher Cydno Longwing (Heliconius cydno) Before arriving at our hotel in Medellín for our farewell dinner, we had one final stop in store. La Romera National Reserve is one of the best places in the world to see the Colombian near-endemic Yellow-headed Manakin. It took a while but eventually we were all awarded with excellent views of this difficult species. Yellow-headed Manakin And in the final few minutes, as we were getting ready to leave, I finally found a snake for the group, an Equatorial Mussarana which was even a new species for yours truly. An excellent way to wrap up a hugely successful tour!  Equatorial Mussurana (Clelia equatoriana) Equatorial Mussurana (Clelia equatoriana) My next post will document our tour extension to the Juan Solito Ecolodge in the northeast of the country.

19 hours ago 1 votes
Bury Broadband and Electricity

We may have a unique opportunity to make an infrastructure investment that can demonstrably save money over the long term – by burying power and broadband lines. This is always an option, of course, but since we are in the early phases of rolling out fiber optic service, and also trying to improve our grid […] The post Bury Broadband and Electricity first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

21 hours ago 1 votes
Mind Changers
yesterday 1 votes
The Force That Drives Korea

The force that split Korea in 1945 in two is not recent: It has been pulling it apart for thousands of years. If you understand it, you can understand all of Korea's history.

2 days ago 2 votes