3,628 research outputs found

    Rotating saddle trap as Foucault's pendulum

    Get PDF
    One of the many surprising results found in the mechanics of rotating systems is the stabilization of a particle in a rapidly rotating planar saddle potential. Besides the counterintuitive stabilization, an unexpected precessional motion is observed. In this note we show that this precession is due to a Coriolis-like force caused by the rotation of the potential. To our knowledge this is the first example where such force arises in an inertial reference frame. We also propose an idea of a simple mechanical demonstration of this effect.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure

    Current induced transverse spin-wave instability in thin ferromagnets: beyond linear stability analysis

    Full text link
    A sufficiently large unpolarized current can cause a spin-wave instability in thin nanomagnets with asymmetric contacts. The dynamics beyond the instability is understood in the perturbative regime of small spin-wave amplitudes, as well as by numerically solving a discretized model. In the absence of an applied magnetic field, our numerical simulations reveal a hierarchy of instabilities, leading to chaotic magnetization dynamics for the largest current densities we consider.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures; revtex

    Fluctuations of g-factors in metal nanoparticles: Effects of electron-electron interaction and spin-orbit scattering

    Full text link
    We investigate the combined effect of spin-orbit scattering and electron-electron interactions on the probability distribution of gg-factors of metal nanoparticles. Using random matrix theory, we find that even a relatively small interaction strength %(ratio of exchange constant JJ and mean level %spacing \spacing 0.3\simeq 0.3) significantly increases gg-factor fluctuations for not-too-strong spin-orbit scattering (ratio of spin-orbit rate and single-electron level spacing 1/\tau_{\rm so} \spacing \lesssim 1), and leads to the possibility to observe gg-factors larger than two.Comment: RevTex, 2 figures inserte

    Vortices on a superconducting nanoshell: phase diagram and dynamics

    Full text link
    In superconductors, the search for special vortex states such as giant vortices focuses on laterally confined or nanopatterned thin superconducting films, disks, rings, or polygons. We examine the possibility to realize giant vortex states and states with non-uniform vorticity on a superconducting spherical nanoshell, due to the interplay of the topology and the applied magnetic field. We derive the phase diagram and identify where, as a function of the applied magnetic field, the shell thickness and the shell radius, these different vortex phases occur. Moreover, the curved geometry allows these states (or a vortex lattice) to coexist with a Meissner state, on the same curved film. We have examined the dynamics of the decay of giant vortices or states with non-uniform vorticity into a vortex lattice, when the magnetic field is adapted so that a phase boundary is crossed.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure

    Over de grondslagen der wiskunde

    Get PDF

    Quantum mechanical time-delay matrix in chaotic scattering

    Get PDF
    We calculate the probability distribution of the matrix Q = -i \hbar S^{-1} dS/dE for a chaotic system with scattering matrix S at energy E. The eigenvalues \tau_j of Q are the so-called proper delay times, introduced by E. P. Wigner and F. T. Smith to describe the time-dependence of a scattering process. The distribution of the inverse delay times turns out to be given by the Laguerre ensemble from random-matrix theory.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Sur les continus irréductibles de M. Zoretti

    Get PDF

    Effects of interaction on an adiabatic quantum electron pump

    Full text link
    We study the effects of inter-electron interactions on the charge pumped through an adiabatic quantum electron pump. The pumping is through a system of barriers, whose heights are deformed adiabatically. (Weak) interaction effects are introduced through a renormalisation group flow of the scattering matrices and the pumped charge is shown to {\it always} approach a quantised value at low temperatures or long length scales. The maximum value of the pumped charge is set by the number of barriers and is given by Qmax=nb1Q_{\rm max} = n_b -1. The correlation between the transmission and the charge pumped is studied by seeing how much of the transmission is enclosed by the pumping contour. The (integer) value of the pumped charge at low temperatures is determined by the number of transmission maxima enclosed by the pumping contour. The dissipation at finite temperatures leading to the non-quantised values of the pumped charge scales as a power law with the temperature (QQintT2αQ-Q_{\rm int} \propto T^{2\alpha}), or with the system size (QQintLs2αQ-Q_{\rm int} \propto L_s^{-2\alpha}), where α\alpha is a measure of the interactions and vanishes at T=0 (Ls=)T=0 ~(L_s=\infty). For a double barrier system, our result agrees with the quantisation of pumped charge seen in Luttinger liquids.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, better quality figures available on request from author

    Time-reversal symmetry breaking by ac field: Effect of commensurability in the frequency domain

    Full text link
    It is shown that the variance of the linear dc conductance fluctuations in an open quantum dot under a high-frequency ac pumping depends significantly on the spectral content of the ac field. For a sufficiently strong ac field the dc conductance fluctuations are much stronger for the periodic pumping than in the case of the noise ac field of the same intensity. The reduction factor r in a static magnetic field takes the universal value of 2 only for the white-noise pumping. In general r may deviate from 2 thus signalling on the time-reversal symmetry breaking by the ac field. For the bi-harmonic ac field of the form A(t)=A_{0} [cos(\omega_{1} t)+cos(\omega_{2} t)] we predict the enchancement of effects of T-symmetry breaking at commensurate frequencies \omega_{2}/\omega_{1}=P/Q. In the high-temperature limit there is also the parity effect: the enchancement is only present if either P or Q is even.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted for "Electronic Correlations: from meso- to nano-physics", edited by G. Montambaux and T. Martin, Rencontres de Morion
    corecore