2,596 research outputs found
Cluster formation in quantum critical systems
The presence of magnetic clusters has been verified in both antiferromagnetic
and ferromagnetic quantum critical systems. We review some of the strongest
evidence for strongly doped quantum critical systems
(Ce(RuFe)Ge) and we discuss the implications for the
response of the system when cluster formation is combined with finite size
effects. In particular, we discuss the change of universality class that is
observed close to the order-disorder transition. We detail the conditions under
which clustering effects will play a significant role also in the response of
stoichiometric systems and their experimental signature.Comment: 5 pages; 2 figures; Internation Conference on Strongly Correlated
Electron System
Terahertz photoresponse of a quantum Hall edge-channel diode
The Teraherz (THz) photoresponse of a two-dimensional electron gas in the
quantum Hall regime is investigated. We use a sample structure which is
topologically equivalent to a Corbino geometry combined with a cross-gate
technique. This quasi-Corbino geometry allows us to directly investigate the
THz-induced transport between adjacent edge-states, thus avoiding bulk effects.
We find a pronounced photo voltage at zero applied bias, which rapidly
decreases when an external current bias is applied. The photo voltage and its
dependence on the bias current can be described using the model of an
illuminated photodiode, resulting from the reconstruction of the Landau bands
at the sample edge. Using the sample as a detector in a Fourier transform
spectrometer setup, we find a resonant response from which we extract a reduced
effective cyclotron mass. The findings support a non-bolometric mechanism of
the induced photo voltage and the proposed edge-channel diode model.Comment: 5 pages, 5 eps-figures, accepted for Phys. Rev.
A dendritic mechanism for decoding traveling waves: Principles and applications to motor cortex
Traveling waves of neuronal oscillations have been observed in many cortical regions, including the motor and sensory cortex. Such waves are often modulated in a task-dependent fashion although their precise functional role remains a matter of debate. Here we conjecture that the cortex can utilize the direction and wavelength of traveling waves to encode information. We present a novel neural mechanism by which such information may be decoded by the spatial arrangement of receptors within the dendritic receptor field. In particular, we show how the density distributions of excitatory and inhibitory receptors can combine to act as a spatial filter of wave patterns. The proposed dendritic mechanism ensures that the neuron selectively responds to specific wave patterns, thus constituting a neural basis of pattern decoding. We validate this proposal in the descending motor system, where we model the large receptor fields of the pyramidal tract neurons — the principle outputs of the motor cortex — decoding motor commands encoded in the direction of traveling wave patterns in motor cortex. We use an existing model of field oscillations in motor cortex to investigate how the topology of the pyramidal cell receptor field acts to tune the cells responses to specific oscillatory wave patterns, even when those patterns are highly degraded. The model replicates key findings of the descending motor system during simple motor tasks, including variable interspike intervals and weak corticospinal coherence. By additionally showing how the nature of the wave patterns can be controlled by modulating the topology of local intra-cortical connections, we hence propose a novel integrated neuronal model of encoding and decoding motor commands
Control of many electron states in semiconductor quantum dots by non-Abelian vector potentials
Adiabatic time evolution of degenerate eigenstates of a quantum system
provides a means for controlling electronic states since mixing between
degenerate levels generates a matrix Berry phase. In the presence of spin-orbit
coupling in n-type semiconductor quantum dots the electron Hamiltonian is
invariant under time reversal operation and the many body groundstate may be
doubly degenerate. This double degeneracy can generate non-Abelian vector
potentials when odd number of electrons are present. We find that the
antisymmetry of many electron wavefunction has no effect on the matrix Berry
phase. We have derived equations that allow one to investigate the effect of
electron correlations by expressing the non-Abelian vector potentials for many
electron system in terms of single electron non-Abelian vector potentials.Comment: minor changes included, accepted in Phys. Rev.
Large-k Limit of Multi-Point Propagators in the RG Formalism
Renormalized versions of cosmological perturbation theory have been very
successful in recent years in describing the evolution of structure formation
in the weakly non-linear regime. The concept of multi-point propagators has
been introduced as a tool to quantify the relation between the initial matter
distribution and the final one and to push the validity of the approaches to
smaller scales. We generalize the n-point propagators that have been considered
until now to include a new class of multi-point propagators that are relevant
in the framework of the renormalization group formalism. The large-k results
obtained for this general class of multi-point propagators match the results
obtained earlier both in the case of Gaussian and non-Gaussian initial
conditions. We discuss how the large-k results can be used to improve on the
accuracy of the calculations of the power spectrum and bispectrum in the
presence of initial non-Gaussianities.Comment: 30 page
Time-Resolved Studies of a Rolled-Up Semiconductor Microtube Laser
We report on lasing in rolled-up microtube resonators. Time-resolved studies
on these semiconductor lasers containing GaAs quantum wells as optical gain
material reveal particularly fast turn-on-times and short pulse emissions above
the threshold. We observe a strong red-shift of the laser mode during the pulse
emission which is compared to the time evolution of the charge-carrier density
calculated by rate equations
Magnetic excitations in the spinel compound Li[MnLi]O (x= 0.2, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0): how a classical system can mimic quantum critical scaling
We present neutron scattering results on the magnetic excitations in the
spinel compounds Li[MnLi]O (x= 0.2, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0).
We show that the dominant excitations below T ~ 70 K are determined by clusters
of Mn^4+ ions, and that these excitations mimic the E/T-scaling found in
quantum critical systems that also harbor magnetic clusters, such as
CeRuFeGe. We argue that our results for this classical
spinel compound show that the unusual response at low temperatures as observed
in quantum critical systems is (at least) partially the result of the
fragmentation of the magnetic lattice into smaller units. This fragmentation in
quantum critical systems is the direct and unavoidable result of intrinsic
disorder.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures; to be submitted to PR
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