53,540 research outputs found
Thermal dependence of the zero-bias conductance through a nanostructure
We show that the conductance of a quantum wire side-coupled to a quantum dot,
with a gate potential favoring the formation of a dot magnetic moment, is a
universal function of the temperature. Universality prevails even if the
currents through the dot and the wire interfere. We apply this result to the
experimental data of Sato et al.[Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 066801 (2005)].Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. More detailed presentation, and updated
references. Final version
An alternative theoretical approach to describe planetary systems through a Schrodinger-type diffusion equation
In the present work we show that planetary mean distances can be calculated
with the help of a Schrodinger-type diffusion equation. The obtained results
are shown to agree with the observed orbits of all the planets and of the
asteroid belt in the solar system, with only three empty states. Furthermore,
the equation solutions predict a fundamental orbit at 0.05 AU from solar-type
stars, a result confirmed by recent discoveries. In contrast to other similar
approaches previously presented in the literature, we take into account the
flatness of the solar system, by considering the flat solutions of the
Schrodinger-type equation. The model has just one input parameter, given by the
mean distance of Mercury.Comment: 6 pages. Version accepted for publication in Chaos, Solitons &
Fractal
Universal zero-bias conductance through a quantum wire side-coupled to a quantum dot
A numerical renormalization-group study of the conductance through a quantum
wire side-coupled to a quantum dot is reported. The temperature and the
dot-energy dependence of the conductance are examined in the light of a
recently derived linear mapping between the Kondo-regime temperature-dependent
conductance and the universal function describing the conductance for the
symmetric Anderson model of a quantum wire with an embedded quantum dot. Two
conduction paths, one traversing the wire, the other a bypass through the
quantum dot, are identified. A gate potential applied to the quantum wire is
shown to control the flow through the bypass. When the potential favors
transport through the wire, the conductance in the Kondo regime rises from
nearly zero at low temperatures to nearly ballistic at high temperatures. When
it favors the dot, the pattern is reversed: the conductance decays from nearly
ballistic to nearly zero. When the fluxes through the two paths are comparable,
the conductance is nearly temperature-independent in the Kondo regime, and a
Fano antiresonance in the fixed-temperature plot of the conductance as a
function of the dot energy signals interference. Throughout the Kondo regime
and, at low temperatures, even in the mixed-valence regime, the numerical data
are in excellent agreement with the universal mapping.Comment: 12 pages, with 9 figures. Submitted to PR
Contributions from Dilatonic Strings to the Flat Behaviour of the Rotational Curves in Galaxies
We analyse the flat behaviour of the rotational curves in some galaxies in
the framework of a dilatonic, current-carrying string. We determine the
expression of the tangential velocity of test objects following a stable
circular equatorial orbit in this spacetime.Comment: This version to be published in the Int. Journal of Modern Phys.
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