69 research outputs found
Quantum conductivity corrections in two dimensional long-range disordered systems with strong spin-orbit splitting of electron spectrum
We study quantum corrections to conductivity in a 2D system with a smooth
random potential and strong spin-orbit splitting of the spectrum. We show that
the interference correction is positive and down to the very low temperature
can exceed the negative correction related to electron-electron interactions.
We discuss this result in the context of the problem of the metal-insulator
transition in Si-MOSFET structures.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
Theory of Neutron Diffraction from the Vortex Lattice in UPt3
Neutron scattering experiments have recently been performed in the
superconducting state of UPt3 to determine the structure of the vortex lattice.
The data show anomalous field dependence of the aspect ratio of the unit cell
in the B phase. There is apparently also a change in the effective coherence
length on the transition from the B to the C phases. Such observations are not
consistent with conventional superconductvity. A theory of these results is
constructed based on a picture of two-component superconductivity for UPt3. In
this way, these unusual observations can be understood. There is a possible
discrepancy between theory and experiment in the detailed field dependence of
the aspect ratio.Comment: 11 pages; uses REVTEX, APS and PRABIB styles; 2 Postscript figure
files include
Universality in an integer Quantum Hall transition
An integer Quantum Hall effect transition is studied in a modulation doped
p-SiGe sample. In contrast to most examples of such transitions the
longitudinal and Hall conductivities at the critical point are close to 0.5 and
1.5 (e^2/h), the theoretically expected values. This allows the extraction of a
scattering parameter, describing both conductivity components, which depends
exponentially on filling factor. The strong similarity of this functional form
to those observed for transitions into the Hall insulating state and for the
B=0 metal- insulator transition implies a universal quantum critical behaviour
for the transitions. The observation of this behaviour in the integer Quantum
Hall effect, for this particular sample, is attributed to the short-ranged
character of the potential associated with the dominant scatterers
Non-equilibrium supercurrent through mesoscopic ferromagnetic weak links
We consider a mesoscopic normal metal, where the spin degeneracy is lifted by
a ferromagnetic exchange field or Zeeman splitting, coupled to two
superconducting reservoirs. As a function of the exchange field or the distance
between the reservoirs, the supercurrent through this device oscillates with an
exponentially decreasing envelope. This phenomenon is similar to the tuning of
a supercurrent by a non-equilibrium quasiparticle distribution between two
voltage-biased reservoirs. We propose a device combining the exchange field and
non-equilibrium effects, which allows us to observe a range of novel phenomena.
For instance, part of the field-suppressed supercurrent can be recovered by a
voltage between the additional probes.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, Europhys. Lett., to be published, corrected two
reference
Phase diagram of the -spin-interacting spin glass with ferromagnetic bias and a transverse field in the infinite- limit
The phase diagram of the -spin-interacting spin glass model in a
transverse field is investigated in the limit under the presence
of ferromagnetic bias. Using the replica method and the static approximation,
we show that the phase diagram consists of four phases: Quantum paramagnetic,
classical paramagnetic, ferromagnetic, and spin-glass phases. We also show that
the static approximation is valid in the ferromagnetic phase in the limit by using the large- expansion. Since the same approximation is
already known to be valid in other phases, we conclude that the obtained phase
diagram is exact.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. another additional author, some amendment
Nonmonotonic Temperature-dependent Resistance in Low Density 2D Hole Gases
The low temperature longitudinal resistance-per-square Rxx(T) in ungated
GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells of high peak hole mobility 1.7x10^6 cm^2/Vs is
metallic for 2D hole density p as low as 3.8x10^9 cm-2. The electronic
contribution to the resistance, R_{el}(T), is a nonmonotonic function of T,
exhibiting thermal activation, R_{el}(T) ~ exp{-E_a/kT}, for kT<<E_F and a
heretofore unnoted decay R_{el}(T) ~ 1/T for k_T>EF. The form of R_{el}(T) is
independent of density, indicating a fundamental relationship between the low
and high T scattering mechanisms in the metallic state
Plastic flow of persistent currents in two dimensional strongly interacting systems
The local persistent current in two dimensional strongly interacting systems
is investigated. As the interaction strength is enhanced the current in the
sample undergoes a transition from diffusive to ordered flow. The strong
interacting flow has the characteristics of a plastic flow through dislocations
in the pinned charge density wave which develops in the system at low
densities.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B (RC
Fermi-liquid behaviour of the low-density 2D hole gas in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure at large values of r_s
We examine the validity of the Fermi-liquid description of the dilute 2D hole
gas in the crossover from 'metallic'-to-'insulating' behaviour of R(T).It has
been established that, at r_s as large as 29, negative magnetoresistance does
exist and is well described by weak localisation. The dephasing time extracted
from the magnetoresistance is dominated by the T^2 -term due to Landau
scattering in the clean limit. The effect of hole-hole interactions, however,
is suppressed when compared with the theory for small r_s.Comment: 4 pages ReVTeX, 4 ps figure
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