965 research outputs found
Analysis of shot noise suppression in mesoscopic cavities in a magnetic field
We present a numerical investigation of shot noise suppression in mesoscopic
cavities and an intuitive semiclassical explanation of the behavior observed in
the presence of an orthogonal magnetic field. In particular, we conclude that
the decrease of shot noise for increasing magnetic field is the result of the
interplay between the diameter of classical cyclotron orbits and the width of
the apertures defining the cavity. Good agreement with published experimental
results is obtained, without the need of introducing fitting parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, contents changed (final version
Positive Cross Correlations in a Normal-Conducting Fermionic Beam Splitter
We investigate a beam splitter experiment implemented in a normal conducting
fermionic electron gas in the quantum Hall regime. The cross-correlations
between the current fluctuations in the two exit leads of the three terminal
device are found to be negative, zero or even positive depending on the
scattering mechanism within the device. Reversal of the cross-correlations sign
occurs due to interaction between different edge-states and does not reflect
the statistics of the fermionic particles which `antibunch'.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Dynamic generation of orbital quasiparticle entanglement in mesoscopic conductors
We propose a scheme for dynamically creating orbitally entangled
electron-hole pairs through a time-dependent variation of the electrical
potential in a mesoscopic conductor. The time-dependent potential generates a
superposition of electron-hole pairs in two different orbital regions of the
conductor, a Mach-Zehnder interferometer in the quantum Hall regime. The
orbital entanglement is detected via violation of a Bell inequality, formulated
in terms of zero-frequency current noise. Adiabatic cycling of the potential,
both in the weak and strong amplitude limit, is considered.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; references update
Ehrenfest-time dependence of weak localization in open quantum dots
Semiclassical theory predicts that the weak localization correction to the
conductance of a ballistic chaotic cavity is suppressed if the Ehrenfest time
exceeds the dwell time in the cavity [I. L. Aleiner and A. I. Larkin, Phys.
Rev. B {\bf 54}, 14424 (1996)]. We report numerical simulations of weak
localization in the open quantum kicked rotator that confirm this prediction.
Our results disagree with the `effective random matrix theory' of transport
through ballistic chaotic cavities.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
The effect of symmetry class transitions on the shot noise in chaotic quantum dots
Using the random matrix theory (RMT) approach, we calculated the weak
localization correction to the shot noise power in a chaotic cavity as a
function of magnetic field and spin-orbit coupling. We found a remarkably
simple relation between the weak localization correction to the conductance and
to the shot noise power, that depends only on the channel number asymmetry of
the cavity. In the special case of an orthogonal-unitary crossover, our result
coincides with the prediction of Braun et. al [J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. {\bf 39},
L159-L165 (2006)], illustrating the equivalence of the semiclassical method to
RMT.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Full counting statistics of chaotic cavities with many open channels
Explicit formulas are obtained for all moments and for all cumulants of the
electric current through a quantum chaotic cavity attached to two ideal leads,
thus providing the full counting statistics for this type of system. The
approach is based on random matrix theory, and is valid in the limit when both
leads have many open channels. For an arbitrary number of open channels we
present the third cumulant and an example of non-linear statistics.Comment: 4 pages, no figures; v2-added references; typos correcte
Quantum state tomography with quantum shotnoise
We propose a scheme for a complete reconstruction of one- and two-particle
orbital quantum states in mesoscopic conductors. The conductor in the transport
state continuously emits orbital quantum states. The orbital states are
manipulated by electronic beamsplitters and detected by measurements of average
currents and zero frequency current shotnoise correlators. We show how, by a
suitable complete set of measurements, the elements of the density matrices of
the one- and two-particle states can be directly expressed in terms of the
currents and current correlators.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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