261 research outputs found
Angular magnetoresistance oscillations in bilayers in tilted magnetic fields
Angular magnetoresistance oscillations (AMRO) were originally discovered in
organic conductors and then found in many other layered metals. It should be
possible to observe AMRO to semiconducting bilayers as well. Here we present an
intuitive geometrical interpretation of AMRO as the Aharonov-Bohm interference
effect, both in real and momentum spaces, for balanced and imbalanced bilayers.
Applications to the experiments with bilayers in tilted magnetic fields in the
metallic state are discussed. We speculate that AMRO may be also observed when
each layer of the bilayer is in the composite-fermion state.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of EP2DS-16. V.2: figures corrected,
one reference added. V3: one reference adde
Oscillatory Magneto-Thermopower and Resonant Phonon Drag in a High-Mobility 2D Electron Gas
Experimental and theoretical evidence is presented for new low-magnetic-field
( kG) 1/B-oscillations in the thermoelectric power of a high-mobility
GaAs/AlGaAs two-dimensional (2D) electron gas. The oscillations result from
inter-Landau-Level resonances of acoustic phonons carrying a momentum equal to
twice the Fermi wavenumber at . Numerical calculations show that both 3D
and 2D phonons can contribute to this effect.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Temperature suppression of STM-induced desorption of hydrogen on Si(100) surfaces
The temperature dependence of hydrogen (H) desorption from Si(100)
H-terminated surfaces by a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) is reported for
negative sample bias. It is found that the STM induced H desorption rate ()
decreases several orders of magnitude when the substrate temperature is
increased from 300 K to 610 K. This is most noticeable at a bias voltage of -7
V where decreases by a factor of ~200 for a temperature change of 80 K,
whilst it only decreases by a factor of ~3 at -5 V upon the same temperature
change. The experimental data can be explained by desorption due to vibrational
heating by inelastic scattering via a hole resonance. This theory predicts a
weak suppression of desorption with increasing temperature due to a decreasing
vibrational lifetime, and a strong bias dependent suppression due to a
temperature dependent lifetime of the hole resonance.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, epsf files. Accepted for surface science letter
Stellar Populations and the Local Group Membership of the Dwarf Galaxy DDO 210
We present deep BVI CCD photometry of the stars in the dwarf galaxy DDO 210.
The color-magnitude diagrams of DDO 210 show a well-defined red giant branch
(RGB) and a blue plume. The tip of the RGB is found to be at I_TRGB = 20.95 +/-
0.10 mag. From this the distance to DDO 210 is estimated to be d = 950 +/- 50
kpc. The corresponding distance of DDO 210 to the center of the Local Group is
870 kpc, showing that it is a member of the Local Group. The mean metallicity
of the red giant branch stars is estimated to be [Fe/H] = -1.9 +/- 0.1 dex.
Integrated magnitudes of DDO 210 within the Holmberg radius (r_H=110 arcsec =
505 pc) are derived to be M_B=-10.6 +/- 0.1 mag and M_V=-10.9 +/- 0.1 mag. B
and V surface brightness profiles of DDO 210 are approximately consistent with
an exponential law with scale lengths r_s(B) = 161 pc and r_s(V) = 175 pc. The
brightest blue and red stars in DDO 210 (BSG and RSG) are found to be among the
faintest in the nearby galaxies with young stellar populations: _{BSG}
= -3.41 +/- 0.11 mag and _{RSG} = -4.69 +/- 0.13 mag. An enhancement of
the star formation rate in the recent past (several hundred Myrs) is observed
in the central region of DDO 210. The opposite trend is observed in the outer
region of the galaxy, suggesting a possible two-component structure of the kind
disk/halo found in spiral galaxies. The real nature of this two-component
structure must, however, be confirmed with more detailed observations.Comment: Latex file, 17 pages with 9 figures, uses emulateapj.sty To appear in
the AJ (in August 1999
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Electron transport in coupled double quantum wells and wires
Due to inter-quantum well tunneling, coupled double quantum wells (DQWs) contain an extra degree of electronic freedom in the growth direction, giving rise to new transport phenomena not found in single electron layers. This report describes work done on coupled DQWs subject to inplane magnetic fields B{sub {parallel}}, and is based on the lead author`s doctoral thesis, successfully defended at Oregon State University on March 4, 1997. First, the conductance of closely coupled DQWs in B{sub {parallel}} is studied. B{sub {parallel}}-induced distortions in the dispersion, the density of states, and the Fermi surface are described both theoretically and experimentally, with particular attention paid to the dispersion anticrossing and resulting partial energy gap. Measurements of giant distortions in the effective mass are found to agree with theoretical calculations. Second, the Landau level spectra of coupled DQWs in tilted magnetic fields is studied. The magnetoresistance oscillations show complex beating as Landau levels from the two Fermi surface components cross the Fermi level. A third set of oscillations resulting from magnetic breakdown is observed. A semiclassical calculation of the Landau level spectra is then performed, and shown to agree exceptionally well with the data. Finally, quantum wires and quantum point contacts formed in DQW structures are investigated. Anticrossings of the one-dimensional DQW dispersion curves are predicted to have interesting transport effects in these devices. Difficulties in sample fabrication have to date prevented experimental verification. However, recently developed techniques to overcome these difficulties are described
Electron transport in Coulomb- and tunnel-coupled one-dimensional systems
We develop a linear theory of electron transport for a system of two
identical quantum wires in a wide range of the wire length L, unifying both the
ballistic and diffusive transport regimes. The microscopic model, involving the
interaction of electrons with each other and with bulk acoustical phonons
allows a reduction of the quantum kinetic equation to a set of coupled
equations for the local chemical potentials for forward- and backward-moving
electrons in the wires. As an application of the general solution of these
equations, we consider different kinds of electrical contacts to the
double-wire system and calculate the direct resistance, the transresistance, in
the presence of tunneling and Coulomb drag, and the tunneling resistance. If L
is smaller than the backscattering length l_P, both the tunneling and the drag
lead to a negative transresistance, while in the diffusive regime (L >>l_P) the
tunneling opposes the drag and leads to a positive transresistance. If L is
smaller than the phase-breaking length, the tunneling leads to interference
oscillations of the resistances that are damped exponentially with L.Comment: Text 14 pages in Latex/Revtex format, 4 Postscript figure
Correlations, compressibility, and capacitance in double-quantum-well systems in the quantum Hall regime
In the quantum Hall regime, electronic correlations in double-layer
two-dimensional electron systems are strong because the kinetic energy is
quenched by Landau quantization. In this article we point out that these
correlations are reflected in the way the partitioning of charge between the
two-layers responds to a bias potential. We report on illustrative calculations
based on an unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation which allows for
spontaneous inter-layer phase coherence. The possibility of studying
inter-layer correlations by capacitive coupling to separately contacted
two-dimensional layers is discussed in detail.Comment: RevTex style, 21 pages, 6 postscript figures in a separate file;
Phys. Rev. B (in press
Charge-Transfer Excitations in One-Dimensional Dimerized Mott Insulators
We investigate the optical properties of one-dimensional (1D) dimerized Mott
insulators using the 1D dimerized extended Hubbard model. Numerical
calculations and a perturbative analysis from the decoupled-dimer limit clarify
that there are three relevant classes of charge-transfer (CT) states generated
by photoexcitation: interdimer CT unbound states, interdimer CT exciton states,
and intradimer CT exciton states. This classification is applied to
understanding the optical properties of an organic molecular material,
1,3,5-trithia-2,4,6-triazapentalenyl (TTTA), which is known for its
photoinduced transition from the dimerized spin-singlet phase to the regular
paramagnetic phase. We conclude that the lowest photoexcited state of TTTA is
the interdimer CT exciton state and the second lowest state is the intradimer
CT exciton state.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Spin-triplet superconductivity in repulsive Hubbard models with disconnected Fermi surfaces: a case study on triangular and honeycomb lattices
We propose that spin-fluctuation-mediated spin-triplet superconductivity may
be realized in repulsive Hubbard models with disconnected Fermi surfaces. The
idea is confirmed for Hubbard models on triangular (dilute band filling) and
honeycomb (near half-filling) lattices using fluctuation exchange
approximation, where triplet pairing order parameter with f-wave symmetry is
obtained. Possible relevance to real superconductors is suggested.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, RevTeX, uses epsf.sty and multicol.st
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