2,200 research outputs found
Spontaneous coherence and the quantum Hall Effect in triple-layer electron systems
We investigate spontaneous interlayer phase coherence and the occurrence of
the quantum Hall effect in triple-layer electron systems. Our work is based on
a simple tight-binding model that greatly facilitates calculations and whose
accuracy is verified by comparison with recent experiments. By calculating the
ground state in an unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation and the
collective-mode spectrum in a time-dependent Hartree-Fock approximation, we
construct a phase diagram delimiting regions in the parameter space of the
model where the integer quantum Hall effect occurs in the absence of interlayer
tunneling.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. B, 20 pages, 5 PostScript figures uuencoded
with TeX fil
Observation of a Linearly Dispersing Collective Mode in a Quantum Hall Ferromagnet
Double layer two-dimensional electron systems can exhibit a fascinating
collective phase believed to exhibit both quantum ferromagnetism and excitonic
superfluidity. This unusual phase has recently been found to exhibit tunneling
phenomena reminiscent of the Josephson effect. A key element of the theoretical
understanding of this bizarre quantum fluid is the existence of linearly
dispersing Goldstone collective modes. Using the method of tunneling
spectroscopy, we have demonstrated the existence of these modes. We find the
measured velocity to be in reasonable agreement with theoretical estimates.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in PRL. Contains new
data, a new figure, and a new titl
Persistent spin splitting of a two-dimensional electron gas in tilted magnetic fields
By varying the orientation of the applied magnetic field with respect to the
normal of a two-dimensional electron gas, the chemical potential and the
specific heat reveal persistent spin splitting in all field ranges. The
corresponding shape of the thermodynamic quantities distinguishes whether the
Rashba spin-orbit interaction RSOI, the Zeeman term or both dominate the
splitting. The interplay of the tilting of the magnetic field and RSOI resulted
to an amplified splitting in weak fields. The effects of changing the RSOI
strength and the Landau level broadening are also investigated.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Anisotropy of Magnetoresistance Hysteresis around the Quantum Hall State in Tilted Magnetic Field
We present an anisotropy of the hysteretic transport around the spin
transition point at Landau level filling factor in tilted magnetic
field. When the direction of the in-plane component of the magnetic field
is normal to the probe current , a strong hysteretic
transport due to the current-induced nuclear spin polarization occurs. When
is parallel to , on the other hand, the hysteresis almost
disappears. We also demonstrate that the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate
at the transition point increases with decreasing angle between
the directions of and . These results suggest that the
morphology of electron spin domains around is affected by the
current direction.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Phase Transition in \nu=2 Bilayer Quantum Hall State
The Hall-plateau width and the activation energy were measured in the bilayer
quantum Hall state at filling factor \nu=2, 1 and 2/3, by changing the total
electron density and the density ratio in the two quantum wells. Their behavior
are remarkably different from one to another. The \nu=1 state is found stable
over all measured range of the density difference, while the \nu=2/3$ state is
stable only around the balanced point. The \nu=2 state, on the other hand,
shows a phase transition between these two types of the states as the electron
density is changed.Comment: 5 pages including figures, RevTe
Theory of interlayer tunneling in bi-layer quantum Hall ferromagnets
Spielman et al. have recently observed a large zero-bias peak in the tunnel
conductance of a bi-layer system in a quantum Hall ferromagnet state. We argue
that disorder-induced topological defects in the pseudospin order parameter
limit the peak size and destroy the predicted Josephson effect. We predict that
the peak would be split and shifted by an in-plane magnetic field in a way that
maps the dispersion relation of the ferromagnet's Goldstone mode. We also
predict resonant structures in the DC I-V characteristic under bias by an {\em
ac} electric field.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
An All-Cryogenic THz Transmission Spectrometer
This paper describes a THz transmission spectrometer for the spectral range
of 2-65 cm^-1 (100 GHz to 2 THz) with a spectral resolution of at least 1.8
cm^-1 (50 GHz) where the source, sample, and detector are all fully contained
in a cryogenic environment. Cyclotron emission from a two-dimensional electron
gas heated with an electrical current serves as a magnetic field tunable
source. The spectrometer is demonstrated at 4.2 K by measuring the resonant
cyclotron absorption of a second two dimensional electron gas. Unique aspects
of the spectrometer are that 1) an ultra-broadband detector is used and 2) the
emitter is run quasi-continuously with a chopping frequency of only 1 Hz. Since
optical coupling to room temperature components is not necessary, this
technique is compatible with ultra-low temperature (sub 100 mK) operation.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Author affiliation and funding acknowledgements
clarifie
Generalised Chern-Simons Theory of Composite Fermions in Bilayer Hall Systems
We present a field theory of Jain's composite fermion model as generalised to
the bilayer quantum Hall systems. We define operators which create composite
fermions and write the Hamiltonian exactly in terms of these operators. This is
seen to be a complexified version of the familiar Chern Simons theory. In the
mean-field approximation, the composite fermions feel a modified effective
magnetic field exactly as happens in usual Chern Simons theories, and plateaus
are predicted at the same values of filling factors as Lopez and Fradkin and
Halperin . But unlike normal Chern Simons theories, we obtain all features of
the first-quantised wavefunctions including its phase, modulus and correct
gaussian factors at the mean field level. The familiar Jain relations for
monolayers and the Halperin wavefunction for bilayers come out as special
cases.Comment: Revtex file; 20 pages after processing; no figure
Spectroscopic Discovery of the Supernova 2003dh Associated with GRB 030329
We present early observations of the afterglow of the Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB)
030329 and the spectroscopic discovery of its associated supernova SN 2003dh.
We obtained spectra of the afterglow of GRB 030329 each night from March 30.12
(0.6 days after the burst) to April 8.13 (UT) (9.6 days after the burst). The
spectra cover a wavelength range of 350 nm to 850 nm. The early spectra consist
of a power-law continuum (F_nu ~ nu^{-0.9}) with narrow emission lines
originating from HII regions in the host galaxy, indicating a low redshift of
z=0.1687. However, our spectra taken after 2003 Apr. 5 show broad peaks in flux
characteristic of a supernova. Correcting for the afterglow emission, we find
the spectrum of the supernova is remarkably similar to the type Ic `hypernova'
SN 1998bw. While the presence of supernovae have been inferred from the light
curves and colors of GRB afterglows in the past, this is the first direct,
spectroscopic confirmation that a subset of classical gamma-ray bursts
originate from supernovae.Comment: published by ApJ Letters; additional material avilable at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/cfa/oir/Research/GRB
Observation of Quantized Hall Drag in a Strongly Correlated Bilayer Electron System
The frictional drag between parallel two-dimensional electron systems has
been measured in a regime of strong interlayer correlations. When the bilayer
system enters the excitonic quantized Hall state at total Landau level filling
factor \nu_T=1 the longitudinal component of the drag vanishes but a strong
Hall component develops. The Hall drag resistance is observed to be accurately
quantized at h/e^2.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Version accepted for publication in Physical
Review Letters. Improved discussion of experimental and theoretical issues,
added references, correction to figure
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