723 research outputs found
Impact of phonons on dephasing of individual excitons in deterministic quantum dot microlenses
Optimized light-matter coupling in semiconductor nanostructures is a key to
understand their optical properties and can be enabled by advanced fabrication
techniques. Using in-situ electron beam lithography combined with a
low-temperature cathodoluminescence imaging, we deterministically fabricate
microlenses above selected InAs quantum dots (QDs) achieving their efficient
coupling to the external light field. This enables to perform four-wave mixing
micro-spectroscopy of single QD excitons, revealing the exciton population and
coherence dynamics. We infer the temperature dependence of the dephasing in
order to address the impact of phonons on the decoherence of confined excitons.
The loss of the coherence over the first picoseconds is associated with the
emission of a phonon wave packet, also governing the phonon background in
photoluminescence (PL) spectra. Using theory based on the independent boson
model, we consistently explain the initial coherence decay, the zero-phonon
line fraction, and the lineshape of the phonon-assisted PL using realistic
quantum dot geometries
Symmetry-dependent Mn-magnetism in Al69.8Pd12.1Mn18.1
Abstract.: We investigated the stability of magnetic moments in Al69.8Pd12.1Mn18.1. This alloy exists in both, the icosahedral (i) and the decagonal (d) quasicrystalline form. The transition from the i- to the d-phase is achieved by a simple heat treatment. We present the results of measurements of the 27Al NMR-response, the dc magnetic susceptibility, and the low-temperature specific heat of both phases. In the icosahedral compound, the majority of the Mn ions carries a magnetic moment. Their number is reduced by approximately a factor of two by transforming the alloy to its decagonal variety. For both compounds, we have indications for two different local environments of the Al nuclei. The first reflects a low density of states of conduction electrons and a weak coupling of the Al nuclei to the Mn-moments. The second type of environment implies a large d-electron density of states at the Fermi level and a strong coupling to the magnetic Mn moments. Spin-glass freezing transitions are observed at Tdecaf=12K for the decagonal, and Ticof=19 K for the icosahedral phas
Percolation limited magnetic order in Eu1-xCaxB6
Abstract.: We report the results of measurements of the low-temperature specific heat Cp(T) and the ac susceptibility χac(T) in low applied magnetic fields for a series of samples of Eu1-xCaxB6. The anomalies in Cp(T), together with the results for χac(T) and M(H), confirm the onset of phase transitions to long range magnetic order for x < 0.7 and provide evidence that for x ≥ 0.7, the Eu moments, which are captured in large magnetic clusters with magnetic moments of the order of 260 μB, adopt a spin-glass type ground state. The data set allows to establish the low-temperature [ T,x] phase diagram of this alloy serie
Strong Electron-Phonon Coupling in Superconducting MgB: A Specific Heat Study
We report on measurements of the specific heat of the recently discovered
superconductor MgB in the temperature range between 3 and 220 K. Based on a
modified Debye-Einstein model, we have achieved a rather accurate account of
the lattice contribution to the specific heat, which allows us to separate the
electronic contribution from the total measured specific heat. From our result
for the electronic specific heat, we estimate the electron-phonon coupling
constant to be of the order of 2, significantly enhanced compared to
common weak-coupling values . Our data also indicate that the
electronic specific heat in the superconducting state of MgB can be
accounted for by a conventional, s-wave type BCS-model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Magneto-optical Kerr effect in
We have measured the magneto-optical Kerr rotation of ferromagnetic
with x=0.2 and 0.4, as well as of serving as
the non-magnetic reference material. As previously for , we could
identify a feature at 1 in the Kerr response which is related with
electronic transitions involving the localized 4f electron states. The absence
of this feature in the data for confirms the relevance of the
partially occupied 4f states in shaping the magneto-optical features of
-based hexaborides. Disorder by -doping broadens the itinerant charge
carrier contribution to the magneto-optical spectra
Brownian Simulations and Uni-Directional Flux in Diffusion
Brownian dynamics simulations require the connection of a small discrete
simulation volume to large baths that are maintained at fixed concentrations
and voltages. The continuum baths are connected to the simulation through
interfaces, located in the baths sufficiently far from the channel. Average
boundary concentrations have to be maintained at their values in the baths by
injecting and removing particles at the interfaces. The particles injected into
the simulation volume represent a unidirectional diffusion flux, while the
outgoing particles represent the unidirectional flux in the opposite direction.
The classical diffusion equation defines net diffusion flux, but not
unidirectional fluxes. The stochastic formulation of classical diffusion in
terms of the Wiener process leads to a Wiener path integral, which can split
the net flux into unidirectional fluxes. These unidirectional fluxes are
infinite, though the net flux is finite and agrees with classical theory. We
find that the infinite unidirectional flux is an artifact caused by replacing
the Langevin dynamics with its Smoluchowski approximation, which is classical
diffusion. The Smoluchowski approximation fails on time scales shorter than the
relaxation time of the Langevin equation. We find the unidirectional
flux (source strength) needed to maintain average boundary concentrations in a
manner consistent with the physics of Brownian particles. This unidirectional
flux is proportional to the concentration and inversely proportional to
to leading order. We develop a BD simulation that maintains
fixed average boundary concentrations in a manner consistent with the actual
physics of the interface and without creating spurious boundary layers
Lorentz violating electrodynamics
After summarizing the most interesting results in the calculation of
synchrotron radiation in the Myers-Pospelov effective model for Lorentz
invariance violating (LIV) electrodynamics, we present a general unified way of
describing the radiation regime of LIV electrodynamics which include the
following three different models : Gambini-Pullin, Ellis et al. and
Myers-Pospelov. Such unification reduces to the standard approach of radiation
in a dispersive and absortive (in general) medium with a given index of
refraction. The formulation is presented up to second order in the LIV
parameter and it is explicitly applied to the synchrotron radiation case.Comment: 11 pages, extended version of the talk given by L.F. Urrutia in the
VI Mexican School: Approaches to Quantum Gravity, Playa del Carmen, Mexico,
Nov. 2004. Minor chages in the text and added reference
Picosecond control of quantum dot laser emission by coherent phonons
A picosecond acoustic pulse can be used to control the lasing emission from semiconductor nanostructures by shifting their electronic transitions. When the active medium, here an ensemble of (In,Ga)As quantum dots, is shifted into or out of resonance with the cavity mode, a large enhancement or suppression of the lasing emission can dynamically be achieved. Most interesting, even in the case when gain medium and cavity mode are in resonance, we observe an enhancement of the lasing due to shaking by coherent phonons. In order to understand the interactions of the nonlinearly coupled photon-exciton-phonon subsystems, we develop a semiclassical model and find an excellent agreement between theory and experiment
Electronic transport in EuB
EuB is a magnetic semiconductor in which defects introduce charge
carriers into the conduction band with the Fermi energy varying with
temperature and magnetic field. We present experimental and theoretical work on
the electronic magnetotransport in single-crystalline EuB. Magnetization,
magnetoresistance and Hall effect data were recorded at temperatures between 2
and 300 K and in magnetic fields up to 5.5 T. The negative magnetoresistance is
well reproduced by a model in which the spin disorder scattering is reduced by
the applied magnetic field. The Hall effect can be separated into an ordinary
and an anomalous part. At 20 K the latter accounts for half of the observed
Hall voltage, and its importance decreases rapidly with increasing temperature.
As for Gd and its compounds, where the rare-earth ion adopts the same Hund's
rule ground state as Eu in EuB, the standard antisymmetric
scattering mechanisms underestimate the of this contribution by several
orders of magnitude, while reproducing its almost perfectly. Well below
the bulk ferromagnetic ordering at = 12.5 K, a two-band model
successfully describes the magnetotransport. Our description is consistent with
published de Haas van Alphen, optical reflectivity, angular-resolved
photoemission, and soft X-ray emission as well as absorption data, but requires
a new interpretation for the gap feature deduced from the latter two
experiments.Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures, submitted to PR
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