1,183 research outputs found
Experimental Evidence for Resonant-Tunneling in a Luttinger-Liquid
We have measured the low temperature conductance of a one-dimensional island
embedded in a single mode quantum wire. The quantum wire is fabricated using
the cleaved edge overgrowth technique and the tunneling is through a single
state of the island. Our results show that while the resonance line shape fits
the derivative of the Fermi function the intrinsic line width decreases in a
power law fashion as the temperature is reduced. This behavior agrees
quantitatively with Furusaki's model for resonant tunneling in a
Luttinger-liquid.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, corrected typo
From Tomonaga-Luttinger to Fermi liquid in transport through a tunneling barrier
Finite length of a one channel wire results in crossover from a
Tomonaga-Luttinger to Fermi liquid behavior with lowering energy scale. In
condition that voltage drop mostly occurs across a tunnel barrier inside
the wire we found coefficients of temperature/voltage expansion of low energy
conductance as a function of constant of interaction, right and left traversal
times. At higher voltage the finite length contribution exhibits oscillations
related to both traversal times and becomes a slowly decaying correction to the
scale-invariant dependence of the conductance.Comment: 12 pages of RevTex file and 1 PS file figur
Experimental investigation of the edge states structure at fractional filling factors
We experimentally study electron transport between edge states in the
fractional quantum Hall effect regime. We find an anomalous increase of the
transport across the 2/3 incompressible fractional stripe in comparison with
theoretical predictions for the smooth edge potential profile. We interpret our
results as a first experimental demonstration of the intrinsic structure of the
incompressible stripes arising at the sample edge in the fractional quantum
Hall effect regime.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures included. Submitted to JETP Letter
Flow Phase Diagram for the Helium Superfluids
The flow phase diagram for He II and He-B is established and discussed
based on available experimental data and the theory of Volovik [JETP Letters
{\bf{78}} (2003) 553]. The effective temperature - dependent but scale -
independent Reynolds number , where
and are the mutual friction parameters and the superfluid Reynolds
number characterizing the circulation of the superfluid component in units of
the circulation quantum are used as the dynamic parameters. In particular, the
flow diagram allows identification of experimentally observed turbulent states
I and II in counterflowing He II with the turbulent regimes suggested by
Volovik.Comment: 2 figure
Shot noise of a quantum dot with non-Fermi liquid correlations
The shot noise of a one-dimensional wire interrupted by two barriers shows
interesting features related to the interplay between Coulomb blockade effects,
Luttinger correlations and discrete excitations. At small bias the Fano factor
reaches the lowest attainable value, 1/2, irrespective of the ratio of the two
junction resistances. At larger voltages this asymmetry is power-law
renormalized by the interaction strength. We discuss how the measurement of
current and these features of the noise allow to extract the Luttinger liquid
parameter.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures,to be published in Phys. Rev. B. For high
resolution image of Fig.1 see http://server1.fisica.unige.it/~braggio/doc.ht
Momentum-Resolved Tunneling into Fractional Quantum Hall Edges
Tunneling from a two-dimensional contact into quantum-Hall edges is
considered theoretically for a case where the barrier is extended, uniform, and
parallel to the edge. In contrast to previously realized tunneling geometries,
details of the microscopic edge structure are exhibited directly in the voltage
and magnetic-field dependence of the differential tunneling conductance. In
particular, it is possible to measure the dispersion of the edge-magnetoplasmon
mode, and the existence of additional, sometimes counterpropagating,
edge-excitation branches could be detected.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTex
Magnetotunneling as a Probe of Luttinger-Liquid Behavior
A novel method for detecting Luttinger-liquid behavior is proposed. The idea
is to measure the tunneling conductance between a quantum wire and a parallel
two-dimensional electron system as a function of both the potential difference
between them, , and an in-plane magnetic field, . We show that the
two-parameter dependence on and allows for a determination of the
characteristic dependence on wave vector and frequency of the {\it
spectral function}, , of the quantum wire. In particular,
the separation of spin and charge in the Luttinger liquid should manifest
itself as singularities in the --characteristic. The experimental
feasibility of the proposal is discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Nova pesquisa sobre as coleções de Richard Spruce na Amazônia: uma colaboração Brasil-Reino Unido
The Northwest Amazon comprises a large region of equatorial forest on the border of Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela, which has been inhabited by indigenous peoples since the pre-colonial period. Today they occupy 80% of its area. Travellers such as Richard Spruce, who visited the region in the 1850s-1860s, described the vitality and dynamics of these populations, demonstrated by the size of their longhouses, their extensive inter-communal ceremonies, and their rich material culture. The biocultural objects and associated information collected by Richard Spruce constitute a unique point of reference for the useful plants, ethnobotany, anthropology and environmental history of the region. Housed at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the British Museum, both in London, this underresearched collection incorporates indigenous plant-based artefacts, samples of useful plant products, detailed archival notes on the use of plants by inhabitants of the Amazon, and accompanying herbarium voucher collections. This paper focusses on an ongoing research programme aimed at building capacity in Brazil to research, cataloguing and mobilising data from these biocultural collections, and developing these important resources for improved understanding of the useful and cultural properties of plants. It aims to build collaborative relationships, making biocultural collections and associated data freely accessible online, and above all to strengthen capacity of indigenous communities on the Rio Negro for autonomous research into material culture and plant use. We present the activities we have developed in the first two years of the programme. Workshops at Kew, Rio de Janeiro and São Gabriel da Cachoeira have enabled the Spruce collections to be fully digitised and artefacts made available through the Reflora portal (reflora.jbrj.gov. br). Training has been given in collection and study of biocultural objects, both to museum staff and representatives of indigenous communities, and a research agenda developed that focuses on better understanding of the shifting relationships between people and natural resources over the last 200 years. We discuss how a broad collaboration has led to constructive, culturally appropriate engagement with local communities,
providing a portal into the world of scientific knowledge and helping to mobilise both scientific and indigenous knowledge in a mutually beneficial manner
Resonance in a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid
We study a homogeneous Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid with backscattering
potential. A perturbative computation of the conductance at and near resonance
is given. We find that the backscattering of one electron dominates that of two
electrons for an interaction parameter and that the resonance point
depends on temperature. Our results may be relevant for recent experiments on
shot-noise in FQHE, where the charge 1/3 and not is measured on
resonance.Comment: 15 pages, three Figures. v2: Definite version, Citations added,
presentation improved. To appear in Phys. Rev. B, Rapid Co
- …