Researcher profile

S. Furkan Ozturk

S. Furkan Ozturk contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Xenon Anesthesia and Nuclear Spin Effects in Chiral Systems

A general mechanism for anesthetic function is not fully understood. Similarly, the mechanism by which xenon, a chemically inert noble gas, can produce anesthetic effects remains ambiguous. However, a previous study reported a surprisingly strong nuclear-spin-dependent variation in anesthetic potency in mice, although no rigorous molecular mechanism was proposed. This perspective examines that observation and explores a potential connection to the chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect, a phenomenon that can account for spin-dependent processes in chiral systems. Here we propose a mechanism that links spin-dependent charge organization with chiral molecular systems through a kinetic model that reproduces the reported nuclear spin dependence of xenon anesthesia. The model is based on the nuclear spin-dependent permeability of isotopes through homochiral media, which modulates biological function through ligand-receptor binding in analogy with the Hill-Langmuir equation. Unlike mechanisms that require long-range quantum coherence, our framework remains robust under physiological, room-temperature conditions because it relies on the intrinsic stability of the CISS effect in dissipative biological environments. Our analysis motivates further experimental investigation of spin-dependent processes, not limited to anesthesia, in complex living systems where chirality is pervasive.

preprint2023arXiv

Dipolar quantum solids emerging in a Hubbard quantum simulator

In quantum mechanical many-body systems, long-range and anisotropic interactions promote rich spatial structure and can lead to quantum frustration, giving rise to a wealth of complex, strongly correlated quantum phases. Long-range interactions play an important role in nature; however, quantum simulations of lattice systems have largely not been able to realize such interactions. A wide range of efforts are underway to explore long-range interacting lattice systems using polar molecules, Rydberg atoms, optical cavities, and magnetic atoms. Here, we realize novel quantum phases in a strongly correlated lattice system with long-range dipolar interactions using ultracold magnetic erbium atoms. As we tune the dipolar interaction to be the dominant energy scale in our system, we observe quantum phase transitions from a superfluid into dipolar quantum solids, which we directly detect using quantum gas microscopy with accordion lattices. Controlling the interaction anisotropy by orienting the dipoles enables us to realize a variety of stripe ordered states. Furthermore, by transitioning non-adiabatically through the strongly correlated regime, we observe the emergence of a range of metastable stripe-ordered states. This work demonstrates that novel strongly correlated quantum phases can be realized using long-range dipolar interaction in optical lattices, opening the door to quantum simulations of a wide range of lattice models with long-range and anisotropic interactions.