43 research outputs found
Orbital entanglement and electron localization in quantum wires
We study the signatures of disorder in the production of orbital electron entanglement in quantum wires. Disordered entanglers suffer the effects of localization of the electron wave function and random fluctuations in entanglement production. This manifests in the statistics of the concurrence, a measure of the produced two-qubit entanglement. We calculate the concurrence distribution as a function of the disorder strength within a random-matrix approach. We also identify significant constraints on the entanglement production as a consequence of the breaking/preservation of time-reversal symmetry. Additionally, our theoretical results are independently supported by simulations of disordered quantum wires based on a tight-binding model
Conductance of 1D quantum wires with anomalous electron-wavefunction localization
We study the statistics of the conductance through one-dimensional
disordered systems where electron wavefunctions decay spatially as for , being a constant. In
contrast to the conventional Anderson localization where and the conductance statistics is determined by a single
parameter: the mean free path, here we show that when the wave function is
anomalously localized () the full statistics of the conductance is
determined by the average and the power . Our theoretical
predictions are verified numerically by using a random hopping tight-binding
model at zero energy, where due to the presence of chiral symmetry in the
lattice there exists anomalous localization; this case corresponds to the
particular value . To test our theory for other values of
, we introduce a statistical model for the random hopping in the tight
binding Hamiltonian.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures. Few changes in the presentation and references
updated. Published in PRB, Phys. Rev. B 85, 235450 (2012
Respon Fisiologis dan Metabolit Darah Kambing dan Domba yang Ditransportasi dengan Pick-Up Triple-Deck
The overall transportation process is a gripping activity for goats and sheep. Goats and sheep canexperience stress as reflected by indicators of weight loss, physiological responses and blood metabolites.The use of sheep goat and sheep conveyance according to the Regulation of the Minister of Agricultureof the Republic of Indonesia number 114/Permentan/PD.410/9/2014concerning the transportation ofsacrificial animals, vehicles can be designed for a maximum of two decks. Farmers use pick-up vehiclesarranged in three levels to reduce transportation costs. This study uses two triple-deck pick-up vehiclesfor 60 goats and 60 sheep. Each deck is filled with 20 animals and five animals are taken as samples.The design used by using a randomized block design (RBD), the position of the deck (deck 1, deck 2,deck 3) as a factor, and body weight as groups. The evaluation results of goat and sheep transportationwith a distance of ± 674 km (± 16 hours of travel) shows that deck has no significant effect (P>0.05) onthe weight loss of goat and sheep also did not affect (P>0.05) on the physiological response and bloodmetabolites. The stress level of goats and sheep transported is not affected by deck position
Statistics of Impedance, Local Density of States, and Reflection in Quantum Chaotic Systems with Absorption
We are interested in finding the joint distribution function of the real and
imaginary parts of the local Green function for a system with chaotic internal
wave scattering and a uniform energy loss (absorption). For a microwave cavity
attached to a single-mode antenna the same quantity has a meaning of the
complex cavity impedance. Using the random matrix approach, we relate its
statistics to that of the reflection coefficient and scattering phase and
provide exact distributions for systems with beta=2 and beta=4 symmetry class.
In the case of beta=1 we provide an interpolation formula which incorporates
all known limiting cases and fits excellently available experimental data as
well as diverse numeric tests.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Zeeman smearing of the Coulomb blockade
Charge fluctuations of a large quantum dot coupled to a two-dimensional lead
via a single-mode good Quantum Point Contact (QPC) and capacitively coupled to
a back-gate, are investigated in the presence of a parallel magnetic field. The
Zeeman term induces an asymmetry between transmission probabilities for the
spin-up and spin-down channels at the QPC, producing noticeable effects on the
quantization of the grain charge already at low magnetic fields. Performing a
quantitative analysis, I show that the capacitance between the gate and the
lead exhibits - instead of a logarithmic singularity - a reduced peak as a
function of gate voltage. Experimental applicability is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures (Final version
Capacitance of a quantum dot from the channel-anisotropic two-channel Kondo model
We investigate the charge fluctuations of a large quantum dot coupled to a
two-dimensional electron gas via a quantum point contact following the work of
Matveev. We limit our discussion to the case where exactly two channels enter
the dot and we discuss the role of an anisotropy between the transmission
coefficients (for these two channels) at the constriction. Experimentally, a
channel-anisotropy can be introduced applying a relatively weak in-plane
magnetic field to the system when only one ``orbital'' channel is open. The
magnetic field leads to different transmission amplitudes for spin-up and
spin-down electrons.
In a strong magnetic field the anisotropic two-channel limit corresponds to
two (spin-polarized) orbital channels entering the dot.
The physics of the charge fluctuations can be captured using a mapping on the
channel-anisotropic two-channel Kondo model. For the case of weak reflection at
the point contact this has already briefly been stressed by one of us in PRB
{\bf 64}, 161302R (2001). This mapping is also appropriate to discuss the
conductance behavior of a two-contact set-up in strong magnetic field.
Here, we elaborate on this approach and also discuss an alternative solution
using a mapping on a channel-isotropic Kondo model. In addition we consider the
limit of weak transmission.
We show that the Coulomb-staircase behavior of the charge in the dot as a
function of the gate voltage, is already smeared out by a small
channel-anisotropy both in the weak- and strong transmission limits.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, 1 Table; Expands cond-mat/0101126; Sec. VI on
2-contact setup added (Final version for PRB
Statistics of Dynamics of Localized Waves
The measured distribution of the single-channel delay time of localized
microwave radiation and its correlation with intensity differ sharply from the
behavior of diffusive waves. The delay time is found to increase with
intensity, while its variance is inversely proportional to the fourth root of
the intensity. The distribution of the delay time weighted by the intensity is
found to be a double-sided stretched exponential to the 1/3 power centered at
zero. The correlation between dwell time and intensity provides a dynamical
test of photon localization.Comment: submitted to PRL; 4 pages including 6 figure
Electronic transport through domain walls in ferromagnetic nanowires: Co-existence of adiabatic and non-adiabatic spin dynamics
We study the effect of a domain wall on the electronic transport in
ferromagnetic quantum wires. Due to the transverse confinement, conduction
channels arise. In the presence of a domain wall, spin up and spin down
electrons in these channels become coupled. For very short domain walls or at
high longitudinal kinetic energy, this coupling is weak, leads to very few spin
flips, and a perturbative treatment is possible. For very long domain wall
structures, the spin follows adiabatically the local magnetization orientation,
suppressing the effect of the domain wall on the total transmission, but
reversing the spin of the electrons. In the intermediate regime, we numerically
investigate the spin-dependent transport behavior for different shapes of the
domain wall. We find that the knowledge of the precise shape of the domain wall
is not crucial for determining the qualitative behavior. For parameters
appropriate for experiments, electrons with low longitudinal energy are
transmitted adiabatically while the electrons at high longitudinal energy are
essentially unaffected by the domain wall. Taking this co-existence of
different regimes into account is important for the understanding of recent
experiments.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Wigner delay time from a random passive and active medium
We consider the scattering of electron by a one-dimensional random potential
(both passive and active medium) and numerically obtain the probability
distribution of Wigner delay time (). We show that in a passive medium
our probability distribution agrees with the earlier analytical results based
on random phase approximation. We have extended our study to the strong
disorder limit, where random phase approximation breaks down. The delay time
distribution exhibits the long time tail () due to resonant states,
which is independent of the nature of disorder indicating the universality of
the tail of the delay time distribution. In the presence of coherent absorption
(active medium) we show that the long time tail is suppressed exponentially due
to the fact that the particles whose trajectories traverse long distances in
the medium are absorbed and are unlikely to be reflected.Comment: 13 pages RevTex, 5 EPS figures included, communicated to PR
Photodissociation in Quantum Chaotic Systems: Random Matrix Theory of Cross-Section Fluctuations
Using the random matrix description of open quantum chaotic systems we
calculate in closed form the universal autocorrelation function and the
probability distribution of the total photodissociation cross section in the
regime of quantum chaos.Comment: 4 pages+1 eps figur