{ "id": "1206.6626", "version": "v1", "published": "2012-06-28T10:51:49.000Z", "updated": "2012-06-28T10:51:49.000Z", "title": "Strong Coulomb drag and broken symmetry in double-layer graphene", "authors": [ "R. V. Gorbachev", "A. K. Geim", "M. I. Katsnelson", "K. S. Novoselov", "T. Tudorovskiy", "I. V. Grigorieva", "A. H. MacDonald", "K. Watanabe", "T. Taniguchi", "L. A. Ponomarenko" ], "journal": "Nature Phys 8, 896-901 (2012)", "doi": "10.1038/NPHYS2441", "categories": [ "cond-mat.mes-hall", "cond-mat.mtrl-sci", "cond-mat.str-el" ], "abstract": "Spatially separated electron systems remain strongly coupled by electron-electron interactions even when they cannot exchange particles, provided that the layer separation d is comparable to a characteristic distance l between charge carriers within layers. One of the consequences of this remote coupling is a phenomenon called Coulomb drag, in which an electric current passed through one of the layers causes frictional charge flow in the other layer. Previously, only the regime of weak (d>>l) to intermediate (d ~ l) coupling could be studied experimentally. Here we use graphene-BN heterostructures with d down to 1 nm to probe interlayer interactions and Coulomb drag in the limit d<