6,100 research outputs found
Gate-tunable split Kondo effect in a carbon nanotube quantum dot
We show a detailed investigation of the split Kondo effect in a carbon
nanotube quantum dot with multiple gate electrodes. It is found that the
splitting decreases for increasing magnetic field, to result in a recovered
zero-bias Kondo resonance at finite magnetic field. Surprisingly, in the same
charge state, but under different gate-configurations, the splitting does not
disappear for any value of the magnetic field, but we observe an avoided
crossing of two high-conductance lines. We think that our observations can be
understood in terms of a two-impurity Kondo effect with two spins coupled
antiferromagnetically. The exchange coupling between the two spins can be
influenced by a local gate, and the non-recovery of the Kondo resonance for
certain gate configurations is explained by the existence of a small
antisymmetric contribution to the exchange interaction between the two spins.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, published versio
Efficient electron heating in relativistic shocks and gamma ray burst afterglow
Electrons in shocks are efficiently energized due to the cross-shock
potential, which develops because of differential deflection of electrons and
ions by the magnetic field in the shock front. The electron energization is
necessarily accompanied by scattering and thermalization. The mechanism is
efficient in both magnetized and non-magnetized relativistic electron-ion
shocks. It is proposed that the synchrotron emission from the heated electrons
in a layer of strongly enhanced magnetic field is responsible for gamma ray
burst afterglows.Comment: revtex
Symmetry breaking in a mechanical resonator made from a carbon nanotube
Nanotubes behave as semi-flexible polymers in that they can bend by a
sizeable amount. When integrating a nanotube in a mechanical resonator, the
bending is expected to break the symmetry of the restoring potential. Here we
report on a new detection method that allows us to demonstrate such symmetry
breaking. The method probes the motion of the nanotube resonator at nearly
zero-frequency; this motion is the low-frequency counterpart of the second
overtone of resonantly excited vibrations. We find that symmetry breaking leads
to the spectral broadening of mechanical resonances, and to an apparent quality
factor that drops below 100 at room temperature. The low quality factor at room
temperature is a striking feature of nanotube resonators whose origin has
remained elusive for many years. Our results shed light on the role played by
symmetry breaking in the mechanics of nanotube resonators.Comment: manuscript and supplementary material, 7 figure
Probing the Production of Actinides under Different r-process Conditions
Several extremely metal-poor stars are known to have an enhanced thorium abundance. These actinide-boost stars have likely inherited material from an r-process that operated under different conditions than the r-process that is reflected in most other metal-poor stars with no actinide enhancement. In this article, we explore the sensitivity of actinide production in r-process calculations to the hydrodynamical conditions as well as the nuclear physics. We find that the initial electron fraction Y e is the most important factor determining the actinide yields and that the abundance ratios between long-lived actinides and lanthanides like europium can vary for different conditions in our calculations. In our setup, conditions with high entropies systematically lead to lower actinide abundances relative to other r-process elements. Furthermore, actinide-enhanced ejecta can also be distinguished from the "regular" composition in other ways, most notably in the second r-process peak abundances.Peer reviewe
Electron Spin Resonance at the Level of 10000 Spins Using Low Impedance Superconducting Resonators
We report on electron spin resonance (ESR) measurements of phosphorus donors
localized in a 200 square micron area below the inductive wire of a lumped
element superconducting resonator. By combining quantum limited parametric
amplification with a low impedance microwave resonator design we are able to
detect around 20000 spins with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 1 in a single
shot. The 150 Hz coupling strength between the resonator field and individual
spins is significantly larger than the 1 - 10 Hz coupling rates obtained with
typical coplanar waveguide resonator designs. Due to the larger coupling rate,
we find that spin relaxation is dominated by radiative decay into the resonator
and dependent upon the spin-resonator detuning, as predicted by Purcell
Ultrasensitive mechanical detection of magnetic moment using a commercial disk drive write head
Sensitive detection of weak magnetic moments is an essential capability in
many areas of nanoscale science and technology, including nanomagnetism,
quantum readout of spins, and nanoscale magnetic resonance imaging. Here, we
show that the write head of a commercial hard drive may enable significant
advances in nanoscale spin detection. By approaching a sharp diamond tip to
within 5 nm from the pole and measuring the induced diamagnetic moment with a
nanomechanical force transducer, we demonstrate a spin sensitivity of 0.032
Bohr magnetons per root Hz, equivalent to 21 proton magnetic moments. The high
sensitivity is enabled in part by the pole's strong magnetic gradient of up to
28 million Tesla per meter and in part by the absence of non-contact friction
due to the extremely flat writer surface. In addition, we demonstrate
quantitative imaging of the pole field with about 10 nm spatial resolution. We
foresee diverse applications for write heads in experimental condensed matter
physics, especially in spintronics, ultrafast spin manipulation, and mesoscopic
physics.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
Signatures of Hong-Ou-Mandel Interference at Microwave Frequencies
Two-photon quantum interference at a beam splitter, commonly known as
Hong-Ou-Mandel interference, was recently demonstrated with
\emph{microwave-frequency} photons by Lang \emph{et
al.}\,\cite{lang:microwaveHOM}. This experiment employed circuit QED systems as
sources of microwave photons, and was based on the measurement of second-order
cross-correlation and auto-correlation functions of the microwave fields at the
outputs of the beam splitter. Here we present the calculation of these
correlation functions for the cases of inputs corresponding to: (i) trains of
\emph{pulsed} Gaussian or Lorentzian single microwave photons, and (ii)
resonant fluorescent microwave fields from \emph{continuously-driven} circuit
QED systems. The calculations include the effects of the finite bandwidth of
the detection scheme. In both cases, the signature of two-photon quantum
interference is a suppression of the second-order cross-correlation function
for small delays. The experiment described in Ref.
\onlinecite{lang:microwaveHOM} was performed with trains of \emph{Lorentzian}
single photons, and very good agreement between the calculations and the
experimental data was obtained.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
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