3,164 research outputs found

    Distribution function of persistent current

    Full text link
    We introduce a variant of the replica trick within the nonlinear sigma model that allows calculating the distribution function of the persistent current. In the diffusive regime, a Gaussian distribution is derived. This result holds in the presence of local interactions as well. Breakdown of the Gaussian statistics is predicted for the tails of the distribution function at large deviations

    Differential identities for parametric correlation functions in disordered systems

    Get PDF
    Copyright © 2008 The American Physical Society.We derive a family of differential identities for parametric correlation functions in disordered systems by casting them as first- or second-order Ward identities of an associated matrix model. We show that this approach allows for a systematic classification of such identities, and provides a template for deriving higher-order results. We also reestablish and generalize some identities of this type which had been derived previously using a different method

    Diamagnetic response of Aharonov-Bohm rings: Impurity backward scatterings

    Full text link
    We report a theoretical calculation on the persistent currents of disordered normal-metal rings. It is shown that the diamagnetic responses of the rings in the vicinity of the zero magnetic field are attributed to multiple backward scatterings off the impurities. We observe the transition from the paramagnetic response to the diamagnetic one as the strength of disorder grows using both the analytic calculation and the numerical exact diagonalization.Comment: final versio

    Influence of trigonal warping on interference effects in bilayer graphene

    Get PDF
    Bilayer graphene (two coupled graphitic monolayers arranged according to Bernal stacking) is a two-dimensional gapless semiconductor with a peculiar electronic spectrum different from the Dirac spectrum in the monolayer material. In particular, the electronic Fermi line in each of its valleys has a strong p -> -p asymmetry due to trigonal warping, which suppresses the weak localization effect. We show that weak localization in bilayer graphene may be present only in devices with pronounced intervalley scattering, and we evaluate the corresponding magnetoresistance

    Mesoscopic oscillations of the conductance of disordered metallic samples as a function of temperature

    Full text link
    We show theoretically and experimentally that the conductance of small disordered samples exhibits random oscillations as a function of temperature. The amplitude of the oscillations decays as a power law of temperature, and their characteristic period is of the order of the temperature itself

    Nonequilibrium mesoscopic conductance fluctuations

    Full text link
    We investigate the amplitude of mesoscopic fluctuations of the differential conductance of a metallic wire at arbitrary bias voltage V. For non-interacting electrons, the variance increases with V. The asymptotic large-V behavior is \sim V/V_c (where eV_c=D/L^2 is the Thouless energy), in agreement with the earlier prediction by Larkin and Khmelnitskii. We find, however, that this asymptotics has a very small numerical prefactor and sets in at very large V/V_c only, which strongly complicates its experimental observation. This high-voltage behavior is preceded by a crossover regime, V/V_c \lesssim 30, where the conductance variance increases by a factor \sim 3 as compared to its value in the regime of universal conductance fluctuations (i.e., at V->0). We further analyze the effect of dephasing due to the electron-electron scattering on at high voltages. With the Coulomb interaction taken into account, the amplitude of conductance fluctuations becomes a non-monotonic function of V. Specifically, drops as 1/V for voltages V >> gV_c, where g is the dimensionless conductance. In this regime, the conductance fluctuations are dominated by quantum-coherent regions of the wire adjacent to the reservoirs.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Fig.2 and one more appendix added, accepted for publication in PR

    Coulomb drag in quantum circuits

    Full text link
    We study drag effect in a system of two electrically isolated quantum point contacts (QPC), coupled by Coulomb interactions. Drag current exhibits maxima as a function of QPC gate voltages when the latter are tuned to the transitions between quantized conductance plateaus. In the linear regime this behavior is due to enhanced electron-hole asymmetry near an opening of a new conductance channel. In the non-linear regime the drag current is proportional to the shot noise of the driving circuit, suggesting that the Coulomb drag experiments may be a convenient way to measure the quantum shot noise. Remarkably, the transition to the non-linear regime may occur at driving voltages substantially smaller than the temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure

    Coulomb drag at zero temperature

    Full text link
    We show that the Coulomb drag effect exhibits saturation at small temperatures, when calculated to the third order in the interlayer interactions. The zero-temperature transresistance is inversely proportional to the third power of the dimensionless sheet conductance. The effect is therefore the strongest in low mobility samples. This behavior should be contrasted with the conventional (second order) prediction that the transresistance scales as a certain power of temperature and is almost mobility-independent. The result demonstrates that the zero-temperature drag is not an unambiguous signature of a strongly-coupled state in double-layer systems.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
    corecore