46 research outputs found

    Current-induced transverse spin wave instability in a thin nanomagnet

    Full text link
    We show that an unpolarized electric current incident perpendicular to the plane of a thin ferromagnet can excite a spin-wave instability transverse to the current direction if source and drain contacts are not symmetric. The instability, which is driven by the current-induced ``spin-transfer torque'', exists for one current direction only.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Mesoscopic fluctuations of nonlinear conductance of chaotic quantum dots

    Full text link
    The nonlinear dc conductance of a two-terminal chaotic cavity is investigated. The fluctuations of the conductance (anti)symmetric with respect to magnetic flux inversion through multichannel cavities are found analytically for arbitrary temperature, magnetic field, and interaction strength. For few-channel dots the effect of dephasing is investigated numerically. A comparison with recent experimental data is provided.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, v.2-notations correcte

    Shot noise of photon-excited electron-hole pairs in open quantum dots

    Full text link
    We investigate shot noise of photon-excited electron-hole pairs in open multi-terminal, multi-channel chaotic dots. Coulomb interactions in the dot are treated self-consistently giving a gauge-invariant expression for the finite frequency correlations. The Coulomb interactions decrease the noise, the strong interaction limit coincides with the non-interacting adiabatic limit. Inelastic scattering and dephasing in the dot are described by voltage and dephasing probe models respectively. We find that dephasing leaves the noise invariant, but inelastic scattering decreases correlations eventually down to zero.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; minor changes, 3 references adde

    Mesoscopic magnetoelectric effect in chaotic quantum dots

    Full text link
    The magnitude of the inverse Faraday effect (IFE), a static magnetization due to an ac electric field, can be strongly increased in a mesoscopic sample, sensitive to time-reversal symmetry (TRS) breaking. Random rectification of ac voltages leads to a magnetization flux, which can be detected by an asymmetry of Hall resistances in a multi-terminal setup. In the absence of applied magnetic field through a chaotic quantum dot the IFE scale, quadratic in voltage, is found as an analytic function of the ac frequency, screening, and coupling to the contacts and floating probes, and numerically it does not show any effect of spin-orbit interaction. Our results qualitatively agree with a recent experiment on TRS-breaking in a six-terminal Hall cross.Comment: 4+ pages, 2 figures; v2-published version, small change

    Gap theory of rectification in ballistic three-terminal conductors

    Full text link
    We introduce a model for rectification in three-terminal ballistic conductors, where the central connecting node is modeled as a chaotic cavity. For bias voltages comparable to the Fermi energy, a strong nonlinearity is created by the opening of a gap in the transport window. Both noninteracting cavity electrons at arbitrary temperature as well as the hot electron regime are considered. Charging effects are treated within the transmission formalism using a self-consistent analysis. The conductance of the third lead in a voltage probe configuration is varied to also model inelastic effects. We find that the basic transport features are insensitive to all of these changes, indicating that the nonlinearity is robust and well suited to applications such as current rectification in ballistic systems. Our findings are in broad agreement with several recent experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Charge fluctuations in open chaotic cavities

    Full text link
    We present a discussion of the charge response and the charge fluctuations of mesoscopic chaotic cavities in terms of a generalized Wigner-Smith matrix. The Wigner-Smith matrix is well known in investigations of time-delay of quantum scattering. It is expressed in terms of the scattering matrix and its derivatives with energy. We consider a similar matrix but instead of an energy derivative we investigate the derivative with regard to the electric potential. The resulting matrix is then the operator of charge. If this charge operator is combined with a self-consistent treatment of Coulomb interaction, the charge operator determines the capacitance of the system, the non-dissipative ac-linear response, the RC-time with a novel charge relaxation resistance, and in the presence of transport a resistance that governs the displacement currents induced into a nearby conductor. In particular these capacitances and resistances determine the relaxation rate and dephasing rate of a nearby qubit (a double quantum dot). We discuss the role of screening of mesoscopic chaotic detectors. Coulomb interaction effects in quantum pumping and in photon assisted electron-hole shot noise are treated similarly. For the latter we present novel results for chaotic cavities with non-ideal leads.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures;v.2--minor changes; contribution for the special issue of J. Phys. A on "Trends in Quantum Chaotic Scattering

    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

    Analysis of shot noise suppression in mesoscopic cavities in a magnetic field

    Full text link
    We present a numerical investigation of shot noise suppression in mesoscopic cavities and an intuitive semiclassical explanation of the behavior observed in the presence of an orthogonal magnetic field. In particular, we conclude that the decrease of shot noise for increasing magnetic field is the result of the interplay between the diameter of classical cyclotron orbits and the width of the apertures defining the cavity. Good agreement with published experimental results is obtained, without the need of introducing fitting parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, contents changed (final version

    Mesoscopic conductance fluctuations in InAs nanowire-based SNS junctions

    Full text link
    We report a systematic experimental study of mesoscopic conductance fluctuations in superconductor/normal/superconductor (SNS) devices Nb/InAs-nanowire/Nb. These fluctuations far exceed their value in the normal state and strongly depend on temperature even in the low-temperature regime. This dependence is attributed to high sensitivity of perfectly conducting channels to dephasing and the SNS fluctuations thus provide a sensitive probe of dephasing in a regime where normal transport fails to detect it. Further, the conductance fluctuations are strongly non-linear in bias voltage and reveal sub-gap structure. The experimental findings are qualitatively explained in terms of multiple Andreev reflections in chaotic quantum dots with imperfect contacts.Comment: Manuscript and supplemen
    corecore