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Won Nam Kang

Researcher at Sungkyunkwan University

Publications -  310
Citations -  6149

Won Nam Kang is an academic researcher from Sungkyunkwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thin film & Superconductivity. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 277 publications receiving 5202 citations. Previous affiliations of Won Nam Kang include Texas Center for Superconductivity & Korea Institute of Science and Technology.

Papers
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MgB2 superconducting thin films with a transition temperature of 39 kelvin.

TL;DR: High-quality caxis–oriented epitaxial MgB2 thin films fabricated using a pulsed laser deposition technique suggest that this compound has potential for electronic device applications, such as microwave devices and superconducting quantum interference devices.
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Two-band superconductivity in MgB2.

TL;DR: The study of the anisotropic superconductor MgB2 using a combination of scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy reveals two distinct energy gaps with both gaps vanishing at the bulk T(c) with the data confirming the importance of Fermi-surface sheet dependent superconductivity proposed in the multigap model.
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Time-Integrated Neutrino Source Searches with 10 Years of IceCube Data.

M. G. Aartsen, +364 more
TL;DR: The results, all based on searches for a cumulative neutrino signal integrated over the 10 years of available data, motivate further study of these and similar sources, including time-dependent analyses, multimessenger correlations, and the possibility of stronger evidence with coming upgrades to the detector.
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High Current-Carrying Capability in c-Axis-Oriented Superconducting MgB2 Thin Films

TL;DR: In high-quality c-axis-oriented MgB2 thin films, high critical current densities of approximately 16 MA/cm(2) at 15 K under self-fields comparable to those of cuprate high-temperature superconductors are observed, suggesting that this compound would be a very promising candidate for practical applications at high temperature and lower power consumption.
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Dendritic magnetic instability in superconducting MgB2 films

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that below 10 K the penetration of magnetic flux in MgB2 films is dominated by dendritic structures abruptly formed in response to an applied field, and that these structures show a temperature-dependent morphology ranging from quasi-1D at 4 K to large tree-like structures near 10 K.