17,684 research outputs found
Broken-Symmetry States of Dirac Fermions in Graphene with A Partially Filled High Landau Level
We report on numerical study of the Dirac fermions in partially filled N=3
Landau level (LL) in graphene. At half-filling, the equal-time density-density
correlation function displays sharp peaks at nonzero wavevectors . Finite-size scaling shows that the peak value grows with electron
number and diverges in the thermodynamic limit, which suggests an instability
toward a charge density wave. A symmetry broken stripe phase is formed at large
system size limit, which is robust against purturbation from disorder
scattering. Such a quantum phase is experimentally observable through transport
measurements. Associated with the special wavefunctions of the Dirac LL, both
stripe and bubble phases become possible candidates for the ground state of the
Dirac fermions in graphene with lower filling factors in the N=3 LL.Comment: Contains are slightly changed. Journal reference and DOI are adde
Odd-Integer Quantum Hall Effect in Graphene: Interaction and Disorder Effects
We study the competition between the long-range Coulomb interaction, disorder
scattering, and lattice effects in the integer quantum Hall effect (IQHE) in
graphene. By direct transport calculations, both and IQHE
states are revealed in the lowest two Dirac Landau levels. However, the
critical disorder strength above which the IQHE is destroyed is much
smaller than that for the IQHE, which may explain the absence of a
plateau in recent experiments. While the excitation spectrum in the
IQHE phase is gapless within numerical finite-size analysis, we do find and
determine a mobility gap, which characterizes the energy scale of the stability
of the IQHE. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the IQHE state is a Dirac
valley and sublattice polarized Ising pseudospin ferromagnet, while the
state is an plane polarized pseudospin ferromagnet.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Quantum Spin Hall Effect and Topologically Invariant Chern Numbers
We present a topological description of quantum spin Hall effect (QSHE) in a
two-dimensional electron system on honeycomb lattice with both intrinsic and
Rashba spin-orbit couplings. We show that the topology of the band insulator
can be characterized by a traceless matrix of first Chern integers.
The nontrivial QSHE phase is identified by the nonzero diagonal matrix elements
of the Chern number matrix (CNM). A spin Chern number is derived from the CNM,
which is conserved in the presence of finite disorder scattering and spin
nonconserving Rashba coupling. By using the Laughlin's gedanken experiment, we
numerically calculate the spin polarization and spin transfer rate of the
conducting edge states, and determine a phase diagram for the QSHE.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figure
Spin Hall Effect and Spin Transfer in Disordered Rashba Model
Based on numerical study of the Rashba model, we show that the spin Hall
conductance remains finite in the presence of disorder up to a characteristic
length scale, beyond which it vanishes exponentially with the system size. We
further perform a Laughlin's gauge experiment numerically and find that all
energy levels cannot cross each other during an adiabatic insertion of the flux
in accordance with the general level-repulsion rule. It results in zero spin
transfer between two edges of the sample as each state always evolves back
after the insertion of one flux quantum, in contrast to the quantum Hall
effect. It implies that the topological spin Hall effect vanishes with the
turn-on of disorder.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures final versio
Classification of Quench Dynamical Behaviours in Spinor Condensates
Thermalization of isolated quantum systems is a long-standing fundamental
problem where different mechanisms are proposed over time. We contribute to
this discussion by classifying the diverse quench dynamical behaviours of
spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensates, which includes well-defined quantum collapse
and revivals, thermalization, and certain special cases. These special cases
are either nonthermal equilibration with no revival but a collapse even though
the system has finite degrees of freedom or no equilibration with no collapse
and revival. Given that some integrable systems are already shown to
demonstrate the weak form of eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH), we
determine the regions where ETH holds and fails in this integrable isolated
quantum system. The reason behind both thermalizing and nonthermalizing
behaviours in the same model under different initial conditions is linked to
the discussion of `rare' nonthermal states existing in the spectrum. We also
propose a method to predict the collapse and revival time scales and how they
scale with the number of particles in the condensate. We use a sudden quench to
drive the system to non-equilibrium and hence the theoretical predictions given
in this paper can be probed in experiments.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figure
Dense blocks of energetic ions driven by multi-petawatt lasers
Laser-driven ion accelerators have the advantages of compact size, high
density, and short bunch duration over conventional accelerators. Nevertheless,
it is still challenging to simultaneously enhance the yield and quality of
laser-driven ion beams for practical applications. Here we propose a scheme to
address this challenge via the use of emerging multi-petawatt lasers and a
density-modulated target. The density-modulated target permits its ions to be
uniformly accelerated as a dense block by laser radiation pressure. In
addition, the beam quality of the accelerated ions is remarkably improved by
embedding the target in a thick enough substrate, which suppresses hot electron
refluxing and thus alleviates plasma heating. Particle-in-cell simulations
demonstrate that almost all ions in a solid-density plasma of a few microns can
be uniformly accelerated to about 25% of the speed of light by a laser pulse at
an intensity around 1022 W/cm2. The resulting dense block of energetic ions may
drive fusion ignition and more generally create matter with unprecedented high
energy density.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
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