17,412 research outputs found

    Breakdown of Particle-Hole Symmetry in the Lowest Landau Level Revealed by Tunneling Spectroscopy

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    Tunneling measurements on 2D electron gases at high magnetic field reveal a qualitative difference between the two spin sublevels of the lowest Landau level. While the tunneling current-voltage characteristic at filling factor ν=1/2\nu = 1/2 is a single peak shifted from zero bias by a Coulomb pseudogap, the spectrum at ν=3/2\nu=3/2 shows a well-resolved double peak structure. This difference is present regardless of whether ν=1/2\nu =1/2 and ν=3/2\nu = 3/2 occur at the same or different magnetic fields. No analogous effect is seen at ν=5/2\nu = 5/2 and 7/2 in the first excited Landau level.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    High-precision torsional magnetometer: Application to two-dimensional electron systems

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    A dc torsional magnetometer for use in high magnetic fields is described. With a resolution of 10^–12 J/T at 5 T and excellent rejection of background moments, this device has been used to study the de Haas–van Alphen effect in two-dimensional electron systems. This resolution is about 100 times that obtained with a commercially available superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer. The device is useful over a wide temperature range including that below 1 K

    Edge State Transport of Separately Contacted Bilayer Systems in the Fractional Quantum Hall Regime

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    Hall and diagonal resistances of bilayer fractional quantum Hall systems are discussed theoretically. The bilayers have electrodes attached separately to each layer. They are assumed to be coupled weakly by interlayer tunneling, while the interlayer Coulomb interaction is negligibly small. It is shown that source-drain voltage dependence of the resistances reflects the Luttinger liquid parameter of the edge state.Comment: 3 pages with 2 eps figure, Revtex, contributed paper to EP2DS-1

    Quantum Lifetime of Two-Dimensional Holes

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    The quantum lifetime of two-dimensional holes in a GaAs/AlGaAs double quantum well is determined via tunneling spectroscopy. At low temperatures the lifetime is limited by impurity scattering but at higher temperatures hole-hole Coulomb scattering dominates. Our results are consistent with Fermi liquid theory, at least up to r_s = 11. At the highest temperatures the measured width of the hole spectral function becomes comparable to the Fermi energy. A new, tunneling-spectroscopic, method for determining the in-plane effective mass of the holes is also demonstrated.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Published versio

    Making "fetch" happen: The influence of social and linguistic context on nonstandard word growth and decline

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    In an online community, new words come and go: today's "haha" may be replaced by tomorrow's "lol." Changes in online writing are usually studied as a social process, with innovations diffusing through a network of individuals in a speech community. But unlike other types of innovation, language change is shaped and constrained by the system in which it takes part. To investigate the links between social and structural factors in language change, we undertake a large-scale analysis of nonstandard word growth in the online community Reddit. We find that dissemination across many linguistic contexts is a sign of growth: words that appear in more linguistic contexts grow faster and survive longer. We also find that social dissemination likely plays a less important role in explaining word growth and decline than previously hypothesized
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