136 research outputs found
Full Current Statistics in the Regime of Weak Coulomb Interaction
We evaluate the full statistics of the current via a Coulomb island that is
strongly coupled to the leads. This strong coupling weakens Coulomb
interaction. We show that in this case the effects of the interaction can be
incorporated into the renormalization of transmission eigenvalues of the
scatterers that connect the island and the leads. We evaluate the Coulomb
blockade gap in the current-voltage characteristics, the value of the gap being
exponentially suppressed as compared to the classical charging energy of the
island.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Interaction Quench in Nonequilibrium Luttinger Liquids
We study the relaxation dynamics of a nonequilibrium Luttinger liquid after a
sudden interaction switch-on ("quench"), focussing on a double-step initial
momentum distribution function. In the framework of the non-equilibrium
bosonization, the results are obtained in terms of singular Fredholm
determinants that are evaluated numerically and whose asymptotics are found
analytically. While the quasi-particle weights decay exponentially with time
after the quench, this is not a relaxation into a thermal state, in view of the
integrability of the model. The steady-state distribution emerging at infinite
times retains two edges which support Luttinger-liquid-like power-law
singularities smeared by dephasing. The obtained critical exponents and the
dephasing length are found to depend on the initial nonequilibrium state.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Magnetoresistance of atomic-sized contacts: an ab-initio study
The magnetoresistance (MR) effect in metallic atomic-sized contacts is
studied theoretically by means of first-principle electronic structure
calculations. We consider three-atom chains formed from Co, Cu, Si, and Al
atoms suspended between semi-infinite Co leads. We employ the screened
Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker Green's function method for the electronic structure
calculation and evaluate the conductance in the ballistic limit using the
Landauer approach. The conductance through the constrictions reflects the
spin-splitting of the Co bands and causes high MR ratios, up to 50%. The
influence of the structural changes on the conductance is studied by
considering different geometrical arrangements of atoms forming the chains. Our
results show that the conductance through s-like states is robust against
geometrical changes, whereas the transmission is strongly influenced by the
atomic arrangement if p or d states contribute to the current.Comment: Revised version, presentation of results is improved, figure 2 is
splitted to two figure
Frequency dispersion of photon-assisted shot noise in mesoscopic conductors
We calculate the low-frequency current noise for AC biased mesoscopic chaotic
cavities and diffusive wires. Contrary to what happens for the admittance, the
frequency dispersion is not dominated by the electric response time (the "RC"
time of the circuit), but by the time that electrons need to diffuse through
the structure (dwell time or diffusion time). Frequency dispersion of noise
stems from fluctuations of the Fermi distribution function that preserve charge
neutrality. Our predictions can be verified with present experimental
technology.Comment: 5 pages, 3 Figure
Nonequilibrium kinetics of a disordered Luttinger liquid
We develop a kinetic theory for strongly correlated disordered
one-dimensional electron systems out of equilibrium, within the Luttinger
liquid model. In the absence of inhomogeneities, the model exhibits no
relaxation to equilibrium. We derive kinetic equations for electron and plasmon
distribution functions in the presence of impurities and calculate the
equilibration rate . Remarkably, for not too low temperature and bias
voltage, is given by the elastic backscattering rate, independent of
the strength of electron-electron interaction, temperature, and bias.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revised versio
Fluctuation Theorem in a Quantum-Dot Aharonov-Bohm Interferometer
In the present study, we investigate the full counting statistics in a
two-terminal Aharonov-Bohm interferometer embedded with an interacting quantum
dot. We introduce a novel saddle-point solution for a cumulant-generating
function, which satisfies the fluctuation theorem and accounts for the
interaction in the mean-field level approximation. Nonlinear transport
coefficients satisfy universal relations imposed by microscopic reversibility,
though the scattering matrix itself is not reversible. The skewness can be
finite even in equilibrium, owing to the interaction and is proportional to the
asymmetric component of nonlinear conductance.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Theory of non-equilibrium electronic Mach-Zehnder interferometer
We develop a theoretical description of interaction-induced phenomena in an
electronic Mach-Zehnder interferometer formed by integer quantum Hall edge
states (with \nu =1 and 2 channels) out of equilibrium. Using the
non-equilibrium functional bosonization framework, we derive an effective
action which contains all the physics of the problem. We apply the theory to
the model of a short-range interaction and to a more realistic case of
long-range Coulomb interaction. The theory takes into account
interaction-induced effects of dispersion of plasmons, charging, and
decoherence. In the case of long-range interaction we find a good agreement
between our theoretical results for the visibility of Aharonov-Bohm
oscillations and experimental data.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
Lowering of surface melting temperature in atomic clusters with a nearly closed shell structure
We investigate the interplay of particle number, N, and structural properties
of selected clusters with N=12 up to N=562 by employing Gupta potentials
parameterized for Aluminum and extensive Monte-Carlo simulations. Our analysis
focuses on closed shell structures with extra atoms. The latter can put the
cluster under a significant stress and we argue that typically such a strained
system exhibits a reduced energy barrier for (surface) diffusion of cluster
atoms. Consequently, also its surface melting temperature, T_S, is reduced, so
that T_S separates from and actually falls well below the bulk value. The
proposed mechanism may be responsible for the suppression of the surface
melting temperature observed in a recent experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, REVTeX 4; submitted to Phys.Rev.
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