2 research outputs found
Are Microwave Induced Zero Resistance States Necessarily Static?
We study the effect of inhomogeneities in Hall conductivity on the nature of
the Zero Resistance States seen in the microwave irradiated two-dimensional
electron systems in weak perpendicular magnetic fields, and we show that
time-dependent domain patterns may emerge in some situations. For an annular
Corbino geometry, with an equilibrium charge density that varies linearly with
radius, we find a time-periodic non-equilibrium solution, which might be
detected by a charge sensor, such as an SET. For a model on a torus, in
addition to static domain patterns seen at high and low values of the
equilibrium charge inhomogeneity, we find that, in the intermediate regime, a
variety of nonstationary states can also exist. We catalog the possibilities we
have seen in our simulations. Within a particular phenomenological model, we
show that linearizing the nonlinear charge continuity equation about a
particularly simple domain wall configuration and analyzing the eigenmodes
allows us to estimate the periods of the solutions to the full nonlinear
equation.Comment: Submitted to PR
Spin generation away from boundaries by nonlinear transport
In several situations of interest, spin polarization may be generated far
from the boundaries of a sample by nonlinear effects of an electric current,
even when such a generation is forbidden by symmetry in the linear regime. We
present an analytically solvable model where spin accumulation results from a
combination of current gradients, nonlinearity, and cubic anisotropy. Further,
we show that even with isotropic conductivity, nonlinear effects in a low
symmetry geometry can generate spin polarization far away from boundaries.
Finally, we find that drift from the boundaries results in spin polarization
patterns that dominate in recent experiments on GaAs by Sih et al. [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 97, 096605 (2006)]