2,698 research outputs found

    Resonant Excitation of Oscillator with Randomly Shifted Levels

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    The problem of resonant excitation of a harmonic oscillator the energy levels of which are slightly shifted under the action of a random potential is solved. It is shown that, in this case, there exists a threshold magnitude of the exciting resonance field, below which the excitation is localized on lower levels, and above which the oscillator is indefinitely excited so that it is necessary to take into account dissipative processes. A method similar to that developed for the oscillator is applied to examine the localization of electrons in a wire with cross-section varying along its length. It is shown, in particular, that there is no localization if this variation is superlinear.Comment: 2 page

    Sharp Magnetic Field Dependence of the 2D Hall Coefficient Induced by Classical Memory Effects

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    We show that a sharp dependence of the Hall coefficient RR on the magnetic field BB arises in two-dimensional electron systems with randomly located strong scatterers. The phenomenon is due to classical memory effects. We calculate analytically the dependence R(B)R(B) for the case of scattering by hard disks of radius aa, randomly distributed with concentration n0β‰ͺ1/a2n_0\ll1/a^2. We demonstrate that in very weak magnetic fields (Ο‰cτ≲n0a2\omega_c\tau \lesssim n_0a^2) memory effects lead to a considerable renormalization of the Boltzmann value of the Hall coefficient: Ξ΄R/R∼1.\delta R / R \sim 1 . With increasing magnetic field, the relative correction to RR decreases, then changes sign, and saturates at the value Ξ΄R/RβˆΌβˆ’n0a2.\delta R / R \sim -n_0a^2 . We also discuss the effect of the smooth disorder on the dependence of RR on BB

    Enhanced interaction between a mechanical oscillator and two coupled resonant electrical circuits

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    This paper reports result of calculation and experimental realization of an electromechanical system that consists of a high-Q mechanical oscillator parametrically coupled in the manner of a capacitive transducer with a RF circuit, which is in turn inductively coupled with another RF circuit. The system operates in the resolved sideband regime when the mechanical oscillator's frequency is larger than the electrical circuits' bandwidths. Using two coupled RF circuits allowed one to enhance the interaction between them and the mechanical oscillator which is one of flexural vibrational modes of a free-edge circular silicon wafer. Such a coupled electromechanical system can be used as a high-sensitive capacitive vibration sensor.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Aharonov-Bohm conductance of a disordered single-channel quantum ring

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    We study the effect of weak disorder on tunneling conductance of a single-channel quantum ring threaded by magnetic flux. We assume that temperature is higher than the level spacing in the ring and smaller than the Fermi energy. In the absence of disorder, the conductance shows sharp dips (antiresonances) as a function of magnetic flux. We discuss different types of disorder and find that the short-range disorder broadens antiresonances, while the long-range one leads to arising of additional resonant dips. We demonstrate that the resonant dips have essentially non-Lorentzian shape. The results are generalized to account for the spin-orbit interaction which leads to splitting of the disorder-broadened resonant dips, and consequently to coexisting of two types of oscillations (both having the form of sharp dips): Aharonov-Bohm oscillations with magnetic flux and Aharonov-Casher oscillations with the strength of the spin-orbit coupling. We also discuss the effect of the Zeeman coupling.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure

    Effective classical Hamiltonians for spin systems: A closed form with quantum spin-wave effects

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    Thermodynamic properties of any quantum spin system can be described by the formally exact, although in general intractable, effective classical Hamilton function \cal H. Here we obtain an explicit form of \cal H which applies at T << J S^2, where J is the exchange and S in the spin value, and incorporates quantum effects at the level of the spin-wave theory (SWT). For a quantum Hamiltonian \hat H of Heisenberg form, \cal H is also Heisenberg but with a long-range effective exchange J_{ij}^{eff}, which is the price for including quantum effects. For three-dimensional magnets, classical SWT with \cal H yields the same results as quantum SWT for the original system, in the antiferromagnetic case with the 1/S correction to the ground-state energy.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, submitted to PR

    Elliptical model of cutoff boundaries for the solar energetic particles measured by POES satellites in December 2006

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    Experimental data from a constellation of five NOAA POES satellites were used for studying the penetration of solar energetic particles (SEP) to high latitudes during long-lasting SEP events on December 5 to 15, 2006. We determined cutoff latitudes for electrons with energies >100 keV and > 300 keV, and protons with energies from 240 keV to >140 MeV. The large number of satellites allowed us to derive snap shots of the cutoff boundaries with 1-hour time resolution. The boundaries were fitted well by ellipses. Based on the elliptical approach, we developed a model of cutoff latitudes for protons and electrons in the northern and southern hemispheres. The cutoff latitude is represented as a function of rigidity, R, of particles, MLT, geomagnetic indices: Dst, Kp, AE, and dipole tilt angle PS. The model predicts tailward and duskward shifting of the cutoff boundaries in relation to intensification of the cross-tail current, field-aligned currents, and symmetrical and asymmetrical parts of the ring current. The model was applied for prediction of a polar cap absorption (PCA) effects observed at high latitudes by CADI network of ionosondes. It was found that the PCA effects are related mainly to intense fluxes of >2.5 MeV protons and >100 keV electrons, which contribute mostly to the ionization of ionospheric D-layer at altitudes of ~75 to 85 km. This finding was confirmed independently by FORMOSAT-3/COSMIC observations of the SEP-associated enhancements of electron content at altitudes of ~80 km. Supplement : a program-code of the PCap-modelComment: 67 pages, 23 figures, a program-cod

    Ultranarrow resonance in Coulomb drag between quantum wires at coinciding densities

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    We investigate the influence of the chemical potential mismatch Ξ”\Delta (different electron densities) on Coulomb drag between two parallel ballistic quantum wires. For pair collisions, the drag resistivity ρD(Ξ”)\rho_{\rm D}(\Delta) shows a peculiar anomaly at Ξ”=0\Delta=0 with ρD\rho_{\rm D} being finite at Ξ”=0\Delta=0 and vanishing at any nonzero Ξ”\Delta. The "bodyless" resonance in ρD(Ξ”)\rho_{\rm D}(\Delta) at zero Ξ”\Delta is only broadened by processes of multi-particle scattering. We analyze Coulomb drag for finite Ξ”\Delta in the presence of both two- and three-particle scattering within the kinetic equation framework, focusing on a Fokker-Planck picture of the interaction-induced diffusion in momentum space of the double-wire system. We describe the dependence of ρD\rho_{\rm D} on Ξ”\Delta for both weak and strong intrawire equilibration due to three-particle scattering.Comment: 21 pages (+2.5 pages Suppl. Mat.), 2 figures; additional explanation

    Non-Markovian Effects on the Two-Dimensional Magnetotransport: Low-field Anomaly in Magnetoresistance

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    We discuss classical magnetotransport in a two-dimensional system with strong scatterers. Even in the limit of very low field, when Ο‰cΟ„β‰ͺ1\omega_c \tau \ll 1 (Ο‰c\omega_c is the cyclotron frequency, Ο„\tau is the scattering time) such a system demonstrates strong negative magnetoresistance caused by non-Markovian memory effects. A regular method for the calculation of non-Markovian corrections to the Drude conductivity is presented. A quantitative theory of the recently discovered anomalous low-field magnetoresistance is developed for the system of two-dimensional electrons scattered by hard disks of radius a,a, randomly distributed with concentration n.n. For small magnetic fields the magentoresistance is found to be parabolic and inversely proportional to the gas parameter, δρxx/ΟβˆΌβˆ’(Ο‰cΟ„)2/na2. \delta \rho_{xx}/\rho \sim - (\omega_c \tau)^2 / n a^2. In some interval of magnetic fields the magnetoresistance is shown to be linear δρxx/ΟβˆΌβˆ’Ο‰cΟ„\delta \rho_{xx}/\rho \sim - \omega_c \tau in a good agreement with the experiment and numerical simulations. Magnetoresistance saturates for Ο‰cτ≫na2\omega_c \tau \gg na^2, when the anomalous memory effects are totally destroyed by the magnetic field. We also discuss magnetotransport at very low fields and show that at such fields magnetoresistance is determined by the trajectories having a long Lyapunov region.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figure

    Anomalous Hall effect with massive Dirac fermions

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    Anomalous Hall effect arises in systems with both spin-orbit coupling and magnetization. Generally, there are three mechanisms contributing to anomalous Hall conductivity: intrinsic, side jump, and skew scattering. The standard diagrammatic approach to the anomalous Hall effect is limited to computation of ladder diagrams. We demonstrate that this approach is insufficient. An important additional contribution comes from diagrams with a single pair of intersecting disorder lines. This contribution constitutes an inherent part of skew scattering on pairs of closely located defects and essentially modifies previously obtained results for anomalous Hall conductivity. We argue that this statement is general and applies to all models of anomalous Hall effect. We illustrate it by an explicit calculation for two-dimensional massive Dirac fermions with weak disorder. In this case, inclusion of the diagrams with crossed impurity lines reverses the sign of the skew scattering term and strongly suppresses the total Hall conductivity at high electron concentrations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; extended versio

    Anomalous Hall effect in 2D Rashba ferromagnet

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    Skew scattering on rare impurity configurations is shown to dominate the anomalous Hall effect in a 2D Rashba ferromagnet. The mechanism originates in scattering on rare impurity pairs separated by distances of the order of the Fermi wave length. Corresponding theoretical description goes beyond the conventional non-crossing approximation. The mechanism provides the only contribution to the anomalous Hall conductivity in the most relevant metallic regime and strongly modifies previously obtained results for lower energies in the leading order with respect to impurity strength.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures + 15 page supplementary information; v3 contains a correction of a mistake in Eqs.(6
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