404 research outputs found
Exact broken-symmetry states and Hartree-Fock solutions for quantum dots at high magnetic fields
Wigner molecules formed at high magnetic fields in circular and elliptic
quantum dots are studied by exact diagonalization (ED) and unrestricted
Hartree-Fock (UHF) methods with multicenter basis of displaced lowest Landau
level wave functions. The broken symmetry states with semi-classical charge
density constructed from superpositions of the ED solutions are compared to the
UHF results. UHF overlooks the dependence of the few-electron wave function on
the actual relative positions of electrons localized in different charge
puddles and partially compensates for this neglect by an exaggerated separation
of charge islands which are more strongly localized than in the exact
broken-symmetry states.Comment: QD2004 proceedings under press in Physica
Violation of Onsager symmetry for a ballistic channel Coulomb coupled to a quantum ring
We investigate a scattering of electron which is injected individually into
an empty ballistic channel containing a cavity that is Coulomb coupled to a
quantum ring charged with a single-electron.
We solve the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation for the electron pair with
an exact account for the electron-electron correlation. Absorption of energy
and angular momentum by the quantum ring is not an even function of the
external magnetic field. As a consequence we find that the electron
backscattering probability is asymmetric in the magnetic field and thus
violates Onsager symmetry.Comment: submitted to EP
Magnetic forces and localized resonances in electron transfer through quantum rings
We study the current flow through semiconductor quantum rings. In high
magnetic field the current is usually injected to the arm of the ring preferred
by classical magnetic forces. However, for narrow magnetic field intervals that
appear periodically on the magnetic field scale the current is injected to the
other arm of the ring. We indicate that the appearance of the anomalous --
non-classical -- current circulation results from Fano interference involving
localized resonant states. The identification of the Fano interference is based
on the comparison of the solution of the scattering problem with the results of
the stabilization method. The latter employs the bound-state type calculations
and allows to extract both the energy of metastable states localized within the
ring and the width of resonances by analysis of the energy spectrum of a finite
size system in function of its length. The Fano resonances involving states of
anomalous current circulation become extremely narrow on both magnetic field
and energy scales. This is consistent with the orientation of the Lorentz force
that tends to keep the electron within the ring and thus increases the lifetime
of the electron localization within the ring. Absence of periodic Fano
resonances in electron transfer probability through a quantum ring containing
an elastic scatterer is also explained.Comment: This paper explains the origins of anomalous (non-classical) current
circulation reported in http://arxiv.org/abs/1004.219
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