34,171 research outputs found
Two-dimensional electron system in high magnetic fields: Wigner crystal vs. composite-fermion liquid
The two dimensional system of electrons in a high magnetic field offers an
opportunity to investigate a phase transition from a quantum liquid into a
Wigner solid. Recent experiments have revealed an incipient composite fermion
liquid in a parameter range where theory and many experiments had previously
suggested the Wigner crystal phase, thus calling into question our current
understanding. This Letter shows how very small quantitative corrections (< 1%)
in the energy due to the weak interaction between composite fermions can cause
a fundamental change in the nature of the ground state, thus providing insight
into the puzzling experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Unified microscopic approach to the interplay of pinned-Wigner-solid and liquid behavior of lowest-Landau-level states in the neighborhood of nu=1/3
Motivated by recent experiments, and using the rotating-and-vibrating
electron-molecule (RVEM) theory [Yannouleas and Landman, Phys. Rev. B 66,
115315 (2002); Phys. Rev. A 81, 023609 (2010)], in conjunction with exact
diagonalization, we develop a unified microscopic approach for the interplay
between liquid fractional-quantum-Hall-effect (FQHE) states and Wigner-solid
states in the lowest Landau level (LLL) in the neighborhood of nu=1/3. Liquid
characteristics of the FQHE states are associated with the symmetry-conserving
rotations and vibrations of the electron molecule. Although the electron
densities of the symmetry-conserving LLL states do not exhibit crystalline
patterns, the intrinsic crystalline correlations are reflected in the
conditional probability distributions and the emergence of cusp yrast states in
the LLL spectra. It is shown that away from the exact fractional fillings, weak
pinning perturbations (due to weak disorder) may overcome the energy gaps
between adjacent global states and generate pinned broken symmetry ground
states as a superposition of symmetry-conserving LLL states with different
total angular momenta. The electron densities of such mixed states (without
good angular momentum quantum numbers) exhibit oscillating patterns that
correspond to molecular crystallites. These pinned Wigner crystallites
represent finite-size precursors of the bulk Wigner-solid state. It is further
shown that the emergence of these molecular crystallites is a consequence of
the presence of RVEM components in the symmetry-conserving LLL states. In
addition, it is shown that the RVEM approach accounts for the Wigner-solid
state in the neighborhood of nu=1, which was also found in the experiments. We
utilize results for sizes in a wide range from N=6 to N=29 electrons, and we
address the extrapolation to the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables. For related papers, see
http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~ph274cy
Fractional statistics in the fractional quantum Hall effect
A microscopic confirmation of the fractional statistics of the {\em
quasiparticles} in the fractional quantum Hall effect has so far been lacking.
We calculate the statistics of the composite-fermion quasiparticles at
and by evaluating the Berry phase for a closed loop
encircling another composite-fermion quasiparticle. A careful consideration of
subtle perturbations in the trajectory due to the presence of an additional
quasiparticle is crucial for obtaining the correct value of the statistics. The
conditions for the applicability of the fractional statistics concept are
discussed.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., in pres
Relevance of inter-composite fermion interaction to the edge Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid
It is shown that Wen's effective theory correctly describes the
Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid at the edge of a system of non-interacting composite
fermions. However, the weak residual interaction between composite fermions
appears to be a relevant perturbation. The filling factor dependence of the
Tomonaga-Luttinger parameter is estimated for interacting composite fermions in
a microscopic approach and satisfactory agreement with experiment is achieved.
It is suggested that the electron field operator may not have a simple
representation in the effective one dimensional theory.Comment: 5 pages; accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
Activation gaps for the fractional quantum Hall effect: realistic treatment of transverse thickness
The activation gaps for fractional quantum Hall states at filling fractions
are computed for heterojunction, square quantum well, as well as
parabolic quantum well geometries, using an interaction potential calculated
from a self-consistent electronic structure calculation in the local density
approximation. The finite thickness is estimated to make 30% correction
to the gap in the heterojunction geometry for typical parameters, which
accounts for roughly half of the discrepancy between the experiment and
theoretical gaps computed for a pure two dimensional system. Certain model
interactions are also considered. It is found that the activation energies
behave qualitatively differently depending on whether the interaction is of
longer or shorter range than the Coulomb interaction; there are indications
that fractional Hall states close to the Fermi sea are destabilized for the
latter.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figure
Fractional Quantum Hall Hierarchy and the Second Landau Level
We generalize the fractional quantum Hall hierarchy picture to apply to
arbitrary, possibly non-Abelian, fractional quantum Hall states. Applying this
to the nu = 5/2 Moore-Read state, we construct new explicit trial wavefunctions
to describe the fractional quantum Hall effect in the second Landau level. The
resulting hierarchy of states, which reproduces the filling fractions of all
observed Hall conductance plateaus in the second Landau level, is characterized
by electron pairing in the ground state and an excitation spectrum that
includes non-Abelian anyons of the Ising type. We propose this as a unifying
picture in which p-wave pairing characterizes the fractional quantum Hall
effect in the second Landau level.Comment: 10 pages; v2: many additional details and discussion included to help
clarify the original results, including a composite fermion type formulation
of some of the states; v3: minor correction
Band Structure of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
The eigenstates of interacting electrons in the fractional quantum Hall phase
typically form fairly well defined bands in the energy space. We show that the
composite fermion theory gives insight into the origin of these bands and
provides an accurate and complete microscopic description of the strongly
correlated many-body states in the low-energy bands. Thus, somewhat like in
Landau's fermi liquid theory, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the
low energy Hilbert space of strongly interacting electrons in the fractinal
quantum Hall regime and that of weakly interacting electrons in the integer
quantum Hall regime.Comment: 10 page
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