140 research outputs found
Calculation and spectroscopy of the Landau band structure at a thin and atomically precise tunneling barrier
Two laterally adjacent quantum Hall systems separated by an extended barrier
of a thickness on the order of the magnetic length possess a complex Landau
band structure in the vicinity of the line junction. The energy dispersion is
obtained from an exact quantum-mechanical calculation of the single electron
eigenstates for the coupled system by representing the wave functions as a
superposition of parabolic cylinder functions. For orbit centers approaching
the barrier, the separation of two subsequent Landau levels is reduced from the
cyclotron energy to gaps which are much smaller. The position of the
anticrossings increases on the scale of the cyclotron energy as the magnetic
field is raised. In order to experimentally investigate a particular gap at
different field strengths but under constant filling factor, a GaAs/AlGaAs
heterostructure with a 52 Angstrom thick tunneling barrier and a gate electrode
for inducing the two-dimensional electron systems was fabricated by the cleaved
edge overgrowth method. The shift of the gaps is observed as a displacement of
the conductance peaks on the scale of the filling factor. Besides this effect,
which is explained within the picture of Landau level mixing for an ideal
barrier, we report on signatures of quantum interferences at imperfections of
the barrier which act as tunneling centers. The main features of the recent
experiment of Yang, Kang et al. are reproduced and discussed for different gate
voltages. Quasiperiodic oscillations, similar to the Aharonov Bohm effect at
the quenched peak, are revealed for low magnetic fields before the onset of the
regular conductance peaks.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Phase coherence in the inelastic cotunneling regime
Two quantum dots with tunable mutual tunnel coupling have been embedded in a
two-terminal Aharonov-Bohm geometry. Aharonov-Bohm oscillations are
investigated in the cotunneling regime. Visibilities of more than 0.8 are
measured indicating that phase-coherent processes are involved in the elastic
and inelastic cotunneling. An oscillation-phase change of pi is detected as a
function of bias voltage at the inelastic cotunneling onset.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coherent probing of excited quantum dot states in an interferometer
Measurements of elastic and inelastic cotunneling currents are presented on a
two-terminal Aharonov--Bohm interferometer with a Coulomb blockaded quantum dot
embedded in each arm. Coherent current contributions, even in magnetic field,
are found in the nonlinear regime of inelastic cotunneling at finite bias
voltage. The phase of the Aharonov--Bohm oscillations in the current exhibits
phase jumps of  at the onsets of inelastic processes. We suggest that
additional coherent elastic processes occur via the excited state. Our
measurement technique allows the detection of such processes on a background of
other inelastic current contributions and contains information about the
excited state occupation probability and the inelastic relaxation rates
An in-situ tunable radio-frequency quantum point contact
Incorporating a variable capacitance diode into a radio-frequency matching
circuit allows us to in-situ tune the resonance frequency of an RF quantum
point contact, increasing the versatility of the latter as a fast charge sensor
of a proximal quantum circuit. The performance of this method is compared in
detail to conventional low-frequency charge detection. The approach is also
applicable to other RF-detection schemes, such as RF-SET circuits.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic anisotropy of epitaxial (Ga,Mn)As on (113)A GaAs
The temperature dependence of magnetic anisotropy in (113)A (Ga,Mn)As layers
grown by molecular beam epitaxy is studied by means of superconducting quantum
interference device (SQUID) magnetometry as well as by ferromagnetic resonance
(FMR) and magnetooptical effects. Experimental results are described
considering cubic and two kinds of uniaxial magnetic anisotropy. The magnitude
of cubic and uniaxial anisotropy constants is found to be proportional to the
fourth and second power of saturation magnetization, respectively. Similarly to
the case of (001) samples, the spin reorientation transition from uniaxial
anisotropy with the easy along the [-1, 1, 0] direction at high temperatures to
the biaxial  anisotropy at low temperatures is observed around 25 K. The
determined values of the anisotropy constants have been confirmed by FMR
studies. As evidenced by investigations of the polar magnetooptical Kerr
effect, the particular combination of magnetic anisotropies allows the
out-of-plane component of magnetization to be reversed by an in-plane magnetic
field. Theoretical calculations within the p-d Zener model explain the
magnitude of the out-of-plane uniaxial anisotropy constant caused by epitaxial
strain, but do not explain satisfactorily the cubic anisotropy constant. At the
same time the findings point to the presence of an additional uniaxial
anisotropy of unknown origin. Similarly to the case of (001) films, this
additional anisotropy can be explained by assuming the existence of a shear
strain. However, in contrast to the (001) samples, this additional strain has
an out-of-the-(001)-plane character.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Assessment of human immediate response capability related to tsunami threats in Indonesia at a sub-national scale
Human immediate response is contextualized into different time compartments reflecting the tsunami early warning chain. Based on the different time compartments the available response time and evacuation time is quantified. The latter incorporates accessibility of safe areas determined by a hazard assessment, as well as environmental and demographic impacts on evacuation speed properties assessed using a Cost Distance Weighting GIS approach. 
Approximately 4.35 million Indonesians live in tsunami endangered areas on the southern coasts of Sumatra, Java and Bali and have between 20 and 150 min to reach a tsunami-safe area. Most endangered areas feature longer estimated-evacuation times and hence the population possesses a weak immediate response capability leaving them more vulnerable to being directly impacted by a tsunami. At a sub-national scale these hotspots were identified and include: the Mentawai islands off the Sumatra coast, various sub-districts on Sumatra and west and east Java. Based on the presented approach a temporal dynamic estimation of casualties and displacements as a function of available response time is obtained for the entire coastal area. As an example, a worst case tsunami scenario for Kuta (Bali) results in casualties of 25 000 with an optimal response time (direct evacuation when receiving a tsunami warning) and 120 000 for minimal response time (no evacuation). The estimated casualties correspond well to observed/reported values and overall model uncertainty is low with a standard error of 5%. 
The results obtained allow for prioritization of intervention measures such as early warning chain, evacuation and contingency planning, awareness and preparedness strategies down to a sub-district level and can be used in tsunami early warning decision support
Imaging ellipsometry of graphene
Imaging ellipsometry studies of graphene on SiO2/Si and crystalline GaAs are
presented. We demonstrate that imaging ellipsometry is a powerful tool to
detect and characterize graphene on any flat substrate. Variable angle
spectroscopic ellipsometry is used to explore the dispersion of the optical
constants of graphene in the visible range with high lateral resolution. In
this way the influence of the substrate on graphene's optical properties can be
investigatedComment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Paramagnetic GaN:Fe and ferromagnetic (Ga,Fe)N - relation between structural, electronic, and magnetic properties
We report on the metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) of GaN:Fe and
(Ga,Fe)N layers on c-sapphire substrates and their thorough characterization
via high-resolution x-ray diffraction (HRXRD), transmission electron microscopy
(TEM), spatially-resolved energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS),
secondary-ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS), photoluminescence (PL), Hall-effect,
electron-paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and magnetometry employing a
superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). A combination of TEM and
EDS reveals the presence of coherent nanocrystals presumably FexN with the
composition and lattice parameter imposed by the host. From both TEM and SIMS
studies, it is stated that the density of nanocrystals and, thus the Fe
concentration increases towards the surface. In layers with iron content x<0.4%
the presence of ferromagnetic signatures, such as magnetization hysteresis and
spontaneous magnetization, have been detected. We link the presence of
ferromagnetic signatures to the formation of Fe-rich nanocrystals, as evidenced
by TEM and EDS studies. This interpretation is supported by magnetization
measurements after cooling in- and without an external magnetic field, pointing
to superparamagnetic properties of the system. It is argued that the high
temperature ferromagnetic response due to spinodal decomposition into regions
with small and large concentration of the magnetic component is a generic
property of diluted magnetic semiconductors and diluted magnetic oxides showing
high apparent Curie temperature.Comment: 21 pages, 30 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. 
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