226 research outputs found
Hole spin dynamics and hole factor anisotropy in coupled quantum well systems
Due to its p-like character, the valence band in GaAs-based heterostructures
offers rich and complex spin-dependent phenomena. One manifestation is the
large anisotropy of Zeeman spin splitting. Using undoped, coupled quantum wells
(QWs), we examine this anisotropy by comparing the hole spin dynamics for high-
and low-symmetry crystallographic orientations of the QWs. We directly measure
the hole factor via time-resolved Kerr rotation, and for the low-symmetry
crystallographic orientations (110) and (113a), we observe a large in-plane
anisotropy of the hole factor, in good agreement with our theoretical
calculations. Using resonant spin amplification, we also observe an anisotropy
of the hole spin dephasing in the (110)-grown structure, indicating that
crystal symmetry may be used to control hole spin dynamics
Magnetic and structural properties of GeMn films: precipitation of intermetallic nanomagnets
We present a comprehensive study relating the nanostructure of Ge_0.95Mn_0.05
films to their magnetic properties. The formation of ferromagnetic nanometer
sized inclusions in a defect free Ge matrix fabricated by low temperature
molecular beam epitaxy is observed down to substrate temperatures T_S as low as
70 deg. Celsius. A combined transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron
energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) analysis of the films identifies the inclusions
as precipitates of the ferromagnetic compound Mn_5Ge_3. The volume and amount
of these precipitates decreases with decreasing T_S. Magnetometry of the films
containing precipitates reveals distinct temperature ranges: Between the
characteristic ferromagnetic transition temperature of Mn_5Ge_3 at
approximately room temperature and a lower, T_S dependent blocking temperature
T_B the magnetic properties are dominated by superparamagnetism of the Mn_5Ge_3
precipitates. Below T_B, the magnetic signature of ferromagnetic precipitates
with blocked magnetic moments is observed. At the lowest temperatures, the
films show features characteristic for a metastable state.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B 74 (01.12.2006). High
resolution images ibide
Mode-multiplexing deep-strong light-matter coupling
Dressing quantum states of matter with virtual photons can create exotic
effects ranging from vacuum-field modified transport to polaritonic chemistry,
and may drive strong squeezing or entanglement of light and matter modes. The
established paradigm of cavity quantum electrodynamics focuses on resonant
light-matter interaction to maximize the coupling strength
, defined as the ratio of the vacuum Rabi
frequency and the carrier frequency of light. Yet, the finite oscillator
strength of a single electronic excitation sets a natural limit to
. Here, we demonstrate a new regime of
record-strong light-matter interaction which exploits the cooperative dipole
moments of multiple, highly non-resonant magnetoplasmon modes specifically
tailored by our metasurface. This multi-mode coupling creates an ultrabroadband
spectrum of over 20 polaritons spanning 6 optical octaves, vacuum ground state
populations exceeding 1 virtual excitation quantum for electronic and optical
modes, and record coupling strengths equivalent to
. The extreme interaction drives
strongly subcycle exchange of vacuum energy between multiple bosonic modes akin
to high-order nonlinearities otherwise reserved to strong-field physics, and
entangles previously orthogonal electronic excitations solely via vacuum
fluctuations of the common cavity mode. This offers avenues towards tailoring
phase transitions by coupling otherwise non-interacting modes, merely by
shaping the dielectric environment
Magnetooptical Study of Zeeman Effect in Mn modulation-doped InAs/InGaAs/InAlAs Quantum Well Structures
We report on a magneto-photoluminescence (PL) study of Mn modulation-doped
InAs/InGaAs/InAlAs quantum wells. Two PL lines corresponding to the radiative
recombination of photoelectrons with free and bound-on-Mn holes have been
observed. In the presence of a magnetic field applied in the Faraday geometry
both lines split into two circularly polarized components. While temperature
and magnetic field dependences of the splitting are well described by the
Brillouin function, providing an evidence for exchange interaction with spin
polarized manganese ions, the value of the splitting exceeds the expected value
of the giant Zeeman splitting by two orders of magnitude for a given Mn
density. Possible reasons of this striking observation are discussed
Sensing dot with high output swing for scalable baseband readout of spin qubits
A key requirement for quantum computing, in particular for a scalable quantum
computing architecture, is a fast and high-fidelity qubit readout. For
semiconductor based qubits, one limiting factor is the output swing of the
charge sensor. We demonstrate GaAs and Si/SiGe asymmetric sensing dots (ASDs),
which exceed the response of a conventional charge sensing dot by more than ten
times, resulting in a boosted output swing of . This
substantially improved output signal is due to a device design with a strongly
decoupled drain reservoir from the sensor dot, mitigating negative feedback
effects of conventional sensors. The large output signal eases the use of very
low-power readout amplifiers in close proximity to the qubit and will thus
render true scalable qubit architectures with semiconductor based qubits
possible in the future.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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