8,427 research outputs found
On localization effects in underdoped cuprates
We comment on transport experiments in underdoped LaSrCuO in the
non-superconducting phase. The temperature dependence of the resistance
strongly resembles what is expected from standard localization theory. However
this theory fails, when comparing with experiments in more detail.Comment: 8 pages, to be published in J. of Superconductivit
Non-linear conductivity and quantum interference in disordered metals
We report on a novel non-linear electric field effect in the conductivity of
disordered conductors. We find that an electric field gives rise to dephasing
in the particle-hole channel, which depresses the interference effects due to
disorder and interaction and leads to a non-linear conductivity. This
non-linear effect introduces a field dependent temperature scale and
provides a microscopic mechanism for electric field scaling at the
metal-insulator transition. We also study the magnetic field dependence of the
non-linear conductivity and suggest possible ways to experimentally verify our
predictions. These effects offer a new probe to test the role of quantum
interference at the metal-insulator transition in disordered conductors.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Mesoscopic Mechanical Resonators as Quantum Non-Inertial Reference Frames
An atom attached to a micrometer-scale wire that is vibrating at a frequency
of 100 MHz and with displacement amplitude 1 nm experiences an acceleration
magnitude 10^9 ms^-2, approaching the surface gravity of a neutron star. As one
application of such extreme non-inertial forces in a mesoscopic setting, we
consider a model two-path atom interferometer with one path consisting of the
100 MHz vibrating wire atom guide. The vibrating wire guide serves as a
non-inertial reference frame and induces an in principle measurable phase shift
in the wave function of an atom traversing the wire frame. We furthermore
consider the effect on the two-path atom wave interference when the vibrating
wire is modeled as a quantum object, hence functioning as a quantum
non-inertial reference frame. We outline a possible realization of the
vibrating wire, atom interferometer using a superfluid helium quantum
interference setup.Comment: Published versio
Phonon scattering mechanisms in suspended nanostructures from 4 to 40 K
We have developed specially designed semiconductor devices for the measurement of thermal conductance in suspended nanostructures. By means of a novel subtractive comparison, we are able to deduce the phonon thermal conductance of individual nanoscale beams of different geometry and dopant profiles. The separate roles of important phonon scattering mechanisms are analyzed and a quantitative estimation of their respective scattering rates is obtained using the Callaway model. Diffuse surface scattering proves to be particularly important in the temperature range from 4 to 40 K. The rates of other scattering mechanisms, arising from phonon-phonon, phonon-electron, and phonon-point defect interactions, also appear to be significantly higher in nanostructures than in bulk samples
Spin polarizations and spin Hall currents in a two-dimensional electron gas with magnetic impurities
We consider a two-dimensional electron gas in the presence of Rashba
spin-orbit coupling, and study the effects of magnetic s-wave impurities and
long-range non-magnetic disorder on the spin-charge dynamics of the system. We
focus on voltage induced spin polarizations and their relation to spin Hall
currents. Our results are obtained using the quasiclassical Green function
technique, and hold in the full range of the disorder parameter .Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. References added, minor stylistic modification
Nanoscale, Phonon-Coupled Calorimetry with Sub-Attojoule/Kelvin Resolution
We have developed an ultrasensitive nanoscale calorimeter that enables heat capacity measurements upon minute, externally affixed (phonon-coupled) samples at low temperatures. For a 5 s measurement at 2 K, we demonstrate an unprecedented resolution of ΔC ~ 0.5 aJ/K (~36 000 k_B). This sensitivity is sufficient to enable heat capacity measurements upon zeptomole-scale samples or upon adsorbates with sub-monolayer coverage across the minute cross sections of these devices. We describe the fabrication and operation of these devices and demonstrate their sensitivity by measuring an adsorbed ^4He film with optimum resolution of ~3 × 10^(-5) monolayers upon an active surface area of only ~1.2 × 10^(-9) m^2
Quantum-measurement backaction from a Bose-Einstein condensate coupled to a mechanical oscillator
We study theoretically the dynamics of a hybrid optomechanical system consisting of a macroscopic mechanical membrane magnetically coupled to a spinor Bose-Einstein condensate via a nanomagnet attached at the membrane center. We demonstrate that this coupling permits us to monitor indirectly the center-of-mass position of the membrane via measurements of the spin of the condensed atoms. These measurements normally induce a significant backaction on the membrane motion, which we quantify for the cases of thermal and coherent initial states of the membrane. We discuss the possibility of measuring this quantum backaction via repeated measurements. We also investigate the potential to generate nonclassical states of the membrane, in particular Schrödinger-cat states, via such repeated measurements
Spin dependent electron transport through a magnetic resonant tunneling diode
Electron transport properties in nanostructures can be modeled, for example,
by using the semiclassical Wigner formalism or the quantum mechanical Green's
functions formalism. We compare the performance and the results of these
methods in the case of magnetic resonant-tunneling diodes. We have implemented
the two methods within the self-consistent spin-density-functional theory. Our
numerical implementation of the Wigner formalism is based on the
finite-difference scheme whereas for the Green's function formalism the
finite-element method is used. As a specific application, we consider the
device studied by Slobodskyy et all. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 246601 (2003)] and
analyze their experimental results. The Wigner and Green's functions formalisms
give similar electron densities and potentials but, surprisingly, the former
method requires much more computer resources in order to obtain numerically
accurate results for currents. Both of the formalisms can successfully be used
to model magnetic resonant tunneling diode structures.Comment: 13 pages and 12 figure
Exciton lifetime in InAs/GaAs quantum dot molecules
The exciton lifetimes in arrays of InAs/GaAs vertically coupled quantum
dot pairs have been measured by time-resolved photoluminescence. A considerable
reduction of by up to a factor of 2 has been observed as compared
to a quantum dots reference, reflecting the inter-dot coherence. Increase of
the molecular coupling strength leads to a systematic decrease of with
decreasing barrier width, as for wide barriers a fraction of structures shows
reduced coupling while for narrow barriers all molecules appear to be well
coupled. The coherent excitons in the molecules gain the oscillator strength of
the excitons in the two separate quantum dots halving the exciton lifetime.
This superradiance effect contributes to the previously observed increase of
the homogeneous exciton linewidth, but is weaker than the reduction of .
This shows that as compared to the quantum dots reference pure dephasing
becomes increasingly important for the molecules
Parametric Amplification and Back-Action Noise Squeezing by a Qubit-Coupled Nanoresonator
We demonstrate the parametric amplification and noise squeezing of nanomechanical motion utilizing dispersive coupling
to a Cooper-pair box qubit. By modulating the qubit bias and resulting mechanical resonance shift, we achieve gain of 30 dB and
noise squeezing of 4 dB. This qubit-mediated effect is 3000 times more effective than that resulting from the weak nonlinearity of
capacitance to a nearby electrode. This technique may be used to prepare nanomechanical squeezed states
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