757 research outputs found
Voltage-current and voltage-flux characteristics of asymmetric high TC DC SQUIDs
We report measurements of transfer functions and flux shifts of 20 on-chip
high T DC SQUIDs half of which were made purposely geometrically
asymmetric. All of these SQUIDs were fabricated using standard high T thin
film technology and they were single layer ones, having 140 nm thickness of
YBaCuO film deposited by laser ablation onto MgO bicrystal
substrates with 24 misorientation angle. For every SQUID the parameters of
its intrinsic asymmetry, i. e., the density of critical current and resistivity
of every junction, were measured directly and independently. We showed that the
main reason for the on-chip spreading of SQUIDs' voltage-current and
voltage-flux characteristics was the intrinsic asymmetry. We found that for
SQUIDs with a relative large inductance ( pH) both the voltage
modulation and the transfer function were not very sensitive to the junctions
asymmetry, whereas SQUIDs with smaller inductance ( pH) were
more sensitive. The results obtained in the paper are important for the
implementation in the sensitive instruments based on high T SQUID arrays
and gratings.Comment: 11 pages, 4 tables, 17 figures This version is substantially
modified. The Introduction and Section 2 are completely rewritten, while
experimental part is mainly the same as in previous versio
Shot noise of spin polarized electrons
The shot noise of spin polarized electrons is shown to be generically
dependent upon spin-flip processes. Such a situation represents perhaps the
simplest instance where the two-particle character of current fluctuations out
of equilibrium is explicit, leading to trinomial statistics of charge transfer
in a single channel model. We calculate the effect of spin-orbit coupling,
magnetic impurities, and precession in an external magnetic field on the noise
in the experimentally relevant cases of diffusive wires and lateral
semiconductor dots, finding dramatic enhancements of the Fano factor. The
possibility of using the shot noise to measure the spin-relaxation time in an
open mesoscopic system is raised.Comment: Published version. Minor clarifications and correction
Spin-orbit coupling and intrinsic spin mixing in quantum dots
Spin-orbit coupling effects are studied in quantum dots in InSb, a narrow-gap
material. Competition between different Rashba and Dresselhaus terms is shown
to produce wholesale changes in the spectrum. The large (and negative)
-factor and the Rashba field produce states where spin is no longer a good
quantum number and intrinsic flips occur at moderate magnetic fields. For dots
with two electrons, a singlet-triplet mixing occurs in the ground state, with
observable signatures in intraband FIR absorption, and possible importance in
quantum computation.Comment: REVTEX4 text with 3 figures (high resolution figs available by
request). Submitted to PR
Statistical mechanics of RNA folding: importance of alphabet size
We construct a minimalist model of RNA secondary-structure formation and use
it to study the mapping from sequence to structure. There are strong,
qualitative differences between two-letter and four or six-letter alphabets.
With only two kinds of bases, there are many alternate folding configurations,
yielding thermodynamically stable ground-states only for a small set of
structures of high designability, i.e., total number of associated sequences.
In contrast, sequences made from four bases, as found in nature, or six bases
have far fewer competing folding configurations, resulting in a much greater
average stability of the ground state.Comment: 7 figures; uses revtex
Spin splitting and precession in quantum dots with spin-orbit coupling: the role of spatial deformation
Extending a previous work on spin precession in GaAs/AlGaAs quantum dots with
spin-orbit coupling, we study the role of deformation in the external
confinement. Small elliptical deformations are enough to alter the precessional
characteristics at low magnetic fields. We obtain approximate expressions for
the modified factor including weak Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit terms.
For more intense couplings numerical calculations are performed. We also study
the influence of the magnetic field orientation on the spin splitting and the
related anisotropy of the factor. Using realistic spin-orbit strengths our
model calculations can reproduce the experimental spin-splittings reported by
Hanson et al. (cond-mat/0303139) for a one-electron dot. For dots containing
more electrons, Coulomb interaction effects are estimated within the
local-spin-density approximation, showing that many features of the
non-iteracting system are qualitatively preserved.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Exchange and the Coulomb blockade: Peak height statistics in quantum dots
We study the effect of the exchange interaction on the Coulomb blockade peak
height statistics in chaotic quantum dots. Because exchange reduces the level
repulsion in the many body spectrum, it strongly affects the fluctuations of
the peak conductance at finite temperature. We find that including exchange
substantially improves the description of the experimental data. Moreover, it
provides further evidence of the presence of high spin states (S>1) in such
systems.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Published version, title change
On the interpretation of muon-spin-rotation experiments in the mixed state of type-II superconductors
We argue that claims about magnetic field dependence of the magnetic field
penetration depth lambda, which were made on the basis of moun-spin-rotation
studies of some superconductors, originate from insufficient accuracy of
theoretical models employed for the data analysis. We also reanalyze some of
already published experimental data and demonstrate that numerical calculations
of Brandt [E.H. Brandt, Phys. Rev. B 68, 54506 (2003)] may serve as a reliable
and powerful tool for the analysis of the data collected in experiments with
conventional superconductors. Furthermore, one can use this approach in order
to distinguish between conventional and unconventional superconductors. It is
unfortunate that these calculations have practically never been employed for
such analyses.Comment: 24 pages, 10figure
Holonomic quantum gates: A semiconductor-based implementation
We propose an implementation of holonomic (geometrical) quantum gates by
means of semiconductor nanostructures. Our quantum hardware consists of
semiconductor macroatoms driven by sequences of ultrafast laser pulses ({\it
all optical control}). Our logical bits are Coulomb-correlated electron-hole
pairs (excitons) in a four-level scheme selectively addressed by laser pulses
with different polarization. A universal set of single and two-qubit gates is
generated by adiabatic change of the Rabi frequencies of the lasers and by
exploiting the dipole coupling between excitons.Comment: 10 Pages LaTeX, 10 Figures include
Anisotropic transport in the two-dimensional electron gas in the presence of spin-orbit coupling
In a two-dimensional electron gas as realized by a semiconductor quantum
well, the presence of spin-orbit coupling of both the Rashba and Dresselhaus
type leads to anisotropic dispersion relations and Fermi contours. We study the
effect of this anisotropy on the electrical conductivity in the presence of
fixed impurity scatterers. The conductivity also shows in general an anisotropy
which can be tuned by varying the Rashba coefficient. This effect provides a
method of detecting and investigating spin-orbit coupling by measuring
spin-unpolarized electrical currents in the diffusive regime. Our approach is
based on an exact solution of the two-dimensional Boltzmann equation and
provides also a natural framework for investigating other transport effects
including the anomalous Hall effect.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure included. Discussion of experimental impact
enlarged; error in calculation of conductivity contribution corrected (cf.
Eq. (A14)), no changes in qualitative results and physical consequence
Ballistic electron motion in a random magnetic field
Using a new scheme of the derivation of the non-linear -model we
consider the electron motion in a random magnetic field (RMF) in two
dimensions. The derivation is based on writing quasiclassical equations and
representing their solutions in terms of a functional integral over
supermatrices with the constraint . Contrary to the standard scheme,
neither singling out slow modes nor saddle-point approximation are used. The
-model obtained is applicable at the length scale down to the electron
wavelength. We show that this model differs from the model with a random
potential (RP).However, after averaging over fluctuations in the Lyapunov
region the standard -model is obtained leading to the conventional
localization behavior.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, to be submitted in PRB v2: Section IV is
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