12,017 research outputs found
Fractionalization of minimal excitations in integer quantum Hall edge channels
A theoretical study of the single electron coherence properties of Lorentzian
and rectangular pulses is presented. By combining bosonization and the Floquet
scattering approach, the effect of interactions on a periodic source of voltage
pulses is computed exactly. When such excitations are injected into one of the
channels of a system of two copropagating quantum Hall edge channels, they
fractionalize into pulses whose charge and shape reflects the properties of
interactions. We show that the dependence of fractionalization induced
electron/hole pair production in the pulses amplitude contains clear signatures
of the fractionalization of the individual excitations. We propose an
experimental setup combining a source of Lorentzian pulses and an Hanbury Brown
and Twiss interferometer to measure interaction induced electron/hole pair
production and more generally to reconstruct single electron coherence of these
excitations before and after their fractionalization.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Integer and fractional charge Lorentzian voltage pulses analyzed in the frame of Photon-assisted Shot Noise
The periodic injection of electrons in a quantum conductor using periodic
voltage pulses applied on a contact is studied in the energy and time-domain
using shot noise computation in order to make comparison with experiments. We
particularly consider the case of periodic Lorentzian voltage pulses. When
carrying integer charge, they are known to provide electronic states with a
minimal number of excitations, while other type of pulses are all accompanied
by an extra neutral cloud of electron and hole excitations. This paper focuses
on the low frequency shot noise which arises when the pulse excitations are
partitioned by a single scatterer in the framework of the Photo Assisted Shot
Noise (PASN) theory. As a unique tool to count the number of excitations
carried per pulse, shot noise reveals that pulses of arbitrary shape and
arbitrary charge show a marked minimum when the charge is integer. Shot noise
spectroscopy is also considered to perform energy-domain characterization of
the charge pulses. In particular it reveals the striking asymmetrical spectrum
of Lorentzian pulses. Finally, time-domain information is obtained from Hong Ou
Mandel like noise correlations when two trains of pulses generated on opposite
contacts collide on the scatterer. As a function of the time delay between
pulse trains, the noise is shown to measure the electron wavepacket
autocorrelation function for integer Lorentzian thanks to electron
antibunching. In order to make contact with recent experiments all the
calculations are made at zero and finite temperature
Real time decoherence of Landau and Levitov quasi-particles in quantum Hall edge channels
Quantum Hall edge channels at integer filling factor provide a unique
test-bench to understand decoherence and relaxation of single electronic
excitations in a ballistic quantum conductor. In this Letter, we obtain a full
visualization of the decoherence scenario of energy (Landau) and time (Levitov)
resolved single electron excitations at filling factor . We show that
the Landau excitation exhibits a fast relaxation followed by spin-charge
separation whereas the Levitov excitation only experiences spin-charge
separation. We finally suggest to use Hong-Ou-Mandel type experiments to probe
specific signatures of these different scenarios.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
The Next Geminga: Deep Multiwavelength Observations of a Neutron Star Identified with 3EG J1835+5918
We describe Chandra, HST, and radio observations that reveal a radio-quiet
but magnetospherically active neutron star in the error circle of the
high-energy gamma-ray source 3EG J1835+5918, the brightest of the unidentified
EGRET sources at high Galactic latitude. A Chandra ACIS-S spectrum of the
ultrasoft X-ray source RX J1836.2+5925, suggested by Mirabal & Halpern as the
neutron star counterpart of 3EG J1835+5918, requires two components: a
blackbody of T~3x10^5 K and a hard tail that can be parameterized as a power
law of photon index Gamma~2. An upper limit of d < 800 pc can be derived from
the blackbody fit under an assumption of R = 10 km. Deep optical imaging with
the HST STIS CCD failed to detect this source to a limit of V > 28.5, thus
f_X/f_V > 6000 and d > 250 pc assuming the X-ray fitted temperature for the
full surface. Repeated observations with the 76 m Lovell telescope at Jodrell
Bank place an upper limit of < 0.1 mJy on the flux density at 1400 MHz for a
pulsar with P > 0.1 s, and < 0.25 mJy for a ~10 ms pulsar at the location of RX
J1836.2+5925. All of this evidence points to an older, possibly more distant
version of the highly efficient gamma-ray pulsar Geminga, as the origin of the
gamma-rays from 3EG J1835+5918.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Robust quantum coherence above the Fermi sea
In this paper we present an experiment where we measured the quantum
coherence of a quasiparticle injected at a well-defined energy above the Fermi
sea into the edge states of the integer quantum Hall regime. Electrons are
introduced in an electronic Mach-Zehnder interferometer after passing through a
quantum dot that plays the role of an energy filter. Measurements show that
above a threshold injection energy, the visibility of the quantum interferences
is almost independent of the energy. This is true even for high energies, up to
130~eV, well above the thermal energy of the measured sample. This result
is in strong contradiction with our theoretical predictions, which instead
predict a continuous decrease of the interference visibility with increasing
energy. This experiment raises serious questions concerning the understanding
of excitations in the integer quantum Hall regime
Global wellposed problem for the 3-D incompressible anisotropic Navier-Stokes equations
In this paper, we consider a global wellposed problem for the 3-D
incompressible anisotropic Navier-Stokes equations (\textit{ANS}). In order to
do so, we first introduce the scaling invariant Besov-Sobolev type spaces,
and , .
Then, we prove the global wellposedness for (\textit{ANS}) provided the initial
data are sufficient small compared to the horizontal viscosity in some suitable
sense, which is stronger than norm. In
particular, our results imply the global wellposedness of (\textit{ANS}) with
high oscillatory initial data.Comment: 39 page
Electron quantum optics : partitioning electrons one by one
We have realized a quantum optics like Hanbury Brown and Twiss (HBT)
experiment by partitioning, on an electronic beam-splitter, single elementary
electronic excitations produced one by one by an on-demand emitter. We show
that the measurement of the output currents correlations in the HBT geometry
provides a direct counting, at the single charge level, of the elementary
excitations (electron/hole pairs) generated by the emitter at each cycle. We
observe the antibunching of low energy excitations emitted by the source with
thermal excitations of the Fermi sea already present in the input leads of the
splitter, which suppresses their contribution to the partition noise. This
effect is used to probe the energy distribution of the emitted wave-packets.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Evidence for a connection between the gamma-ray and the highest energy cosmic-ray emissions by BL Lacertae objects
A set of potentially gamma-ray--loud BL Lac objects is selected by
intersecting the EGRET and BL Lac catalogs. Of the resulting 14 objects, eight
are found to correlate with arrival directions of ultra--high-energy cosmic
rays (UHECRs), with significance of the order of 5 sigma. This suggests that
gamma-ray emission can be used as a distinctive feature of those BL Lac objects
that are capable of producing UHECR.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, version published in APJ Letter
Phase resolved spectroscopy of the Vela pulsar with XMM-Newton
The ~10^4 y old Vela Pulsar represents the bridge between the young Crab-like
and the middle-aged rotation powered pulsars. Its multiwavelength behaviour is
due to the superposition of different spectral components. We take advantage of
the unprecedented harvest of photons collected by XMM-Newton to assess the Vela
Pulsar spectral shape and to study the pulsar spectrum as a function of its
rotational phase. As for the middle-aged pulsars Geminga, PSR B0656+14 and PSR
B1055-52 (the "Three Musketeers"), the phase-integrated spectrum of Vela is
well described by a three-component model, consisting of two blackbodies
(T_bb1=(1.06+/-0.03)x10^6 K, R_bb1=5.1+/-0.3 km, T_bb2=(2.16+/-0.06)x10^6 K,
R_bb2=0.73+/-0.08 km) plus a power-law (gamma=2.2+/-0.3). The relative
contributions of the three components are seen to vary as a function of the
pulsar rotational phase. The two blackbodies have a shallow 7-9% modulation.
The cooler blackbody, possibly related to the bulk of the neutron star surface,
has a complex modulation, with two peaks per period, separated by ~0.35 in
phase, the radio pulse occurring exactly in between. The hotter blackbody,
possibly originating from a hot polar region, has a nearly sinusoidal
modulation, with a single, broad maximum aligned with the second peak of the
cooler blackbody, trailing the radio pulse by ~0.15 in phase. The non thermal
component, magnetospheric in origin, is present only during 20% of the pulsar
phase and appears to be opposite to the radio pulse. XMM-Newton phase-resolved
spectroscopy unveils the link between the thermally emitting surface of the
neutron star and its charge-filled magnetosphere, probing emission geometry as
a function of the pulsar rotation. This is a fundamental piece of information
for future 3-dimensional modeling of the pulsar magnetosphere.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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