1,331 research outputs found

    Shot-noise in transport and beam experiments

    Full text link
    Consider two Fermi gases with the same {\it average} currents: a transport gas, as in solid-state experiments where the chemical potentials of terminal 1 is μ+eV\mu+eV and of terminal 2 and 3 is μ\mu, and a beam, i.e., electrons entering only from terminal 1 having energies between μ\mu and μ+eV\mu+eV. By expressing the current noise as a sum over single-particle transitions we show that the temporal current fluctuations are very different: The beam is noisier due to allowed single-particle transitions into empty states below μ\mu. Surprisingly, the correlations between terminals 2 and 3 are the same.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Steps and dips in the ac conductance and noise of mesoscopic structures

    Full text link
    The frequency dependence of the equilibrium ac conductance (or the noise power spectrum) through a mesoscopic structure is shown to exhibit steps and dips. The steps, at energies related to the resonances of the structure, are closely related to the partial Friedel phases of these resonances, thus allowing a direct measurement of these phases (without interferometry). The dips in the spectrum are related to a destructive interference in the absorption of energy by transitions between these resonances, in some similarity with the Fano effect.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Transmission of two interacting electrons

    Full text link
    The transmission of two electrons through a region where they interact is found to be enhanced by a renormalization of the repulsive interaction. For a specific example of the single-particle Hamiltonian, which includes a strongly attractive potential, the renormalized interaction becomes attractive, and the transmission has a pronounced maximum as function of the depth of the single-electron attractive potential. The results apply directly to a simple model of scattering of two interacting electrons by a quantum dot.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
    corecore