138 research outputs found
Pseudospin excitations in coaxial nanotubes
In a 2DEG confined to two coaxial tubes the `tube degree of freedom' can be
described in terms of pseudospin-1/2 dynamics. The presence of tunneling
between the two tubes leads to a collective oscillation known as pseudospin
resonance. We employ perturbation theory to examine the dependence of the
frequency of this mode with respect to a coaxial magnetic field for the case of
small intertube distances. Coulomb interaction leads to a shift of the
resonance frequency and to a finite lifetime of the pseudospin excitations. The
presence of the coaxial magnetic field gives rise to pronounced peaks in the
shift of the resonance frequency. For large magnetic fields this shift vanishes
due to the effects of Zeeman splitting. Finally, an expression for the
linewidth of the resonance is derived. Numerical analysis of this expression
suggests that the linewidth strongly depends on the coaxial magnetic field,
which leads to several peaks of the linewidth as well as regions where damping
is almost completely suppressed.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Angular dependence of the tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance in magnetic tunnel junctions
Based on general symmetry considerations we investigate how the dependence of the tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) on the magnetization direction is determined by the specific form of the spin-orbit coupling field. By extending a phenomenological model, previously proposed for explaining the main trends of the TAMR in (001) ferromagnet/semiconductor/normal-metal magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) [J. Moser et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 056601 (2007)], we provide a unified qualitative description of the TAMR in MTJs with different growth directions. In particular, we predict the forms of the angular dependence of the TAMR in (001),(110), and (111) MTJs with structure inversion asymmetry and/or bulk inversion asymmetry. The effects of in-plane uniaxial strain on the TAMR are also investigated
Magnetoanisotropic Andreev Reflection in Ferromagnet/Superconductor Junctions
Andreev reflection spectroscopy of ferromagnet/superconductor (FS) junctions
is an important probe of spin polarization. We theoretically investigate
spin-polarized transport in FS junctions in the presence of Rashba and
Dresselhaus interfacial spin-orbit fields and show that Andreev reflection can
be controlled by changing the magnetization orientation. We predict a giant in-
and out-of-plane magnetoanisotropy of the junction conductance. If the
ferromagnet is highly spin polarized---in the half-metal limit---the
magnetoanisotropic Andreev reflection depends universally on the spin-orbit
fields only. Our results show that Andreev reflection spectroscopy can be used
for sensitive probing of interfacial spin-orbit fields in FS junction.Comment: Pages 6-10 contain supplemental materia
Probing topological transitions in HgTe/CdTe quantum wells by magneto-optical measurements
In two-dimensional topological insulators, such as inverted HgTe/CdTe quantum
wells, helical quantum spin Hall (QSH) states persist even at finite magnetic
fields below a critical magnetic field , above which only quantum
Hall (QH) states can be found. Using linear-response theory, we theoretically
investigate the magneto-optical properties of inverted HgTe/CdTe quantum wells,
both for infinite two-dimensional and finite-strip geometries, and possible
signatures of the transition between the QSH and QH regimes. In the absorption
spectrum, several peaks arise due to non-equidistant Landau levels in both
regimes. However, in the QSH regime, we find an additional absorption peak at
low energies in the finite-strip geometry. This peak arises due to the presence
of edge states in this geometry and persists for any Fermi level in the QSH
regime, while in the QH regime the peak vanishes if the Fermi level is situated
in the bulk gap. Thus, by sweeping the gate voltage, it is possible to
experimentally distinguish between the QSH and QH regimes due to this
signature. Moreover, we investigate the effect of spin-orbit coupling and
finite temperature on this measurement scheme.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure
Beating of Friedel oscillations induced by spin-orbit interaction
By exploiting our recently derived exact formula for the Lindhard
polarization function in the presence of Bychkov-Rashba (BR) and Dresselhaus
(D) spin-orbit interaction (SOI), we show that the interplay of different SOI
mechanisms induces highly anisotropic modifications of the static dielectric
function. We find that under certain circumstances the polarization function
exhibits doubly-singular behavior, which leads to an intriguing novel
phenomenon, beating of Friedel oscillations. This effect is a general feature
of systems with BR+D SOI and should be observed in structures with a
sufficiently strong SOI.Comment: 3 figure
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