39 research outputs found
All-electrical control of single ion spins in a semiconductor
We propose a method for all-electrical initialization, control and readout of
the spin of single ions substituted into a semiconductor. Mn ions in GaAs form
a natural example. In the ion's ground state the Mn core spin magnetic moment
locks antiparallel to the spin and orbital magnetic moment of a bound valence
hole from the GaAs host. Direct electrical manipulation of the ion spin is
possible because electric fields manipulate the orbital wave function of the
hole, and through the spin-orbit coupling the spin is reoriented as well.
Coupling two or more ion spins can be achieved using electrical gates to
control the size of the valence hole wave function near the semiconductor
surface. This proposal for coherent manipulation of individual ionic spins and
controlled coupling of ionic spins via electrical gates alone may find
applications in extremely high density information storage and in scalable
coherent or quantum information processing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Tuning of tunneling current noise spectra singularities by localized states charging
We report the results of theoretical investigations of tunneling current
noise spectra in a wide range of applied bias voltage. Localized states of
individual impurity atoms play an important role in tunneling current noise
formation. It was found that switching "on" and "off" of Coulomb interaction of
conduction electrons with two charged localized states results in power law
singularity of low-frequency tunneling current noise spectrum ()
and also results on high frequency component of tunneling current spectra
(singular peaks appear).Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Coulomb singularity effects in tunnelling spectroscopy of individual impurities
Non-equilibrium Coulomb effects in resonant tunnelling processes through deep
impurity states are analyzed. It is shown that Coulomb vertex corrections to
the tunnelling transfer amplitude lead to a power-law singularity in current-
voltage characteristicsComment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy at low temperatures of the (110) surface of Te doped GaAs single crystals
We have performed voltage dependent imaging and spatially resolved
spectroscopy on the (110) surface of Te doped GaAs single crystals with a low
temperature scanning tunneling microscope (STM). A large fraction of the
observed defects are identified as Te dopant atoms which can be observed down
to the fifth subsurface layer. For negative sample voltages, the dopant atoms
are surrounded by Friedel charge density oscillations. Spatially resolved
spectroscopy above the dopant atoms and above defect free areas of the GaAs
(110) surface reveals the presence of conductance peaks inside the
semiconductor band gap. The appearance of the peaks can be linked to charges
residing on states which are localized within the tunnel junction area. We show
that these localized states can be present on the doped GaAs surface as well as
at the STM tip apex.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PR
The mechanism of hole carrier generation and the nature of pseudogap- and 60K-phases in YBCO
In the framework of the model assuming the formation of NUC on the pairs of
Cu ions in CuO plane the mechanism of hole carrier generation is
considered and the interpretation of pseudogap and 60 K-phases in
. is offered. The calculated dependences of hole
concentration in on doping and temperature
are found to be in a perfect quantitative agreement with experimental data. As
follows from the model the pseudogap has superconducting nature and arises at
temperature in small clusters uniting a number of
NUC's due to large fluctuations of NUC occupation. Here and
are the superconducting transition temperatures of infinite and finite
clusters of NUC's, correspondingly. The calculated and
dependences are in accordance with experiment. The area between
and corresponds to the area of fluctuations
where small clusters fluctuate between superconducting and normal states owing
to fluctuations of NUC occupation. The results may serve as important arguments
in favor of the proposed model of HTSC.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Effects of Impurities with Singlet-Triplet Configuration on Multiband Superconductors
Roles of multipole degrees of freedom in multiband superconductors are
investigated in a case of impurities whose low-lying states consist of singlet
ground and triplet excited states, which is related to the experimental fact
that the transition temperature is increased by Pr substitution for
La in LaOsSb. The most important contribution to the
increase comes from the inelastic interband scattering of electrons coupled to
quadrupole or octupole moments of impurities. It is found that a magnetic field
modifies an effective pairing interaction and the scattering anisotropy appears
in the field-orientation dependence of the upper critical field
in the vicinity of , although a uniaxial anisotropic field is
required for experimental detection. This would be proof that the Pr internal
degrees of freedom are relevant to the stability of superconductivity in
(LaPr)OsSb.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp