2,937 research outputs found
Coulomb drag between one-dimensional conductors
We have analyzed Coulomb drag between currents of interacting electrons in
two parallel one-dimensional conductors of finite length attached to
external reservoirs. For strong coupling, the relative fluctuations of electron
density in the conductors acquire energy gap . At energies larger than
, where
is the impurity scattering rate, and for , where is the
fluctuation velocity, the gap leads to an ``ideal'' drag with almost equal
currents in the conductors. At low energies the drag is suppressed by coherent
instanton tunneling, and the zero-temperature transconductance vanishes,
indicating the Fermi liquid behavior.Comment: 5 twocolumn pages in RevTex, added 1 eps-Figure and calculation of
trans-resistanc
Current noise spectrum in a solvable model of tunneling Fermi-edge singularity
We consider tunneling of spinless electrons from a single-channel emitter into an empty collector through an interacting resonant level of the quantum dot (QD). When all Coulomb screening of sudden charge variations of the dot during the tunneling is realized by the emitter channel, the system is mapped onto an exactly solvable model of a dissipative qubit. The qubit density matrix evolution is described with a generalized Bloch equation which permits us to count the tunneling electrons and find the charge transfer statistics. The two generating functions of the counting statistics of the charge transferred during the QD evolutions from its stationary and empty state have been expressed through each other. It is used to calculate the spectrum of the steady current noise and to demonstrate the occurrence of the bifurcation of its single zero-frequency minimum into two finite-frequency dips due to the qubit coherent dynamics
Transport properties of single channel quantum wires with an impurity: Influence of finite length and temperature on average current and noise
The inhomogeneous Tomonaga Luttinger liquid model describing an interacting
quantum wire adiabatically coupled to non-interacting leads is analyzed in the
presence of a weak impurity within the wire. Due to strong electronic
correlations in the wire, the effects of impurity backscattering, finite bias,
finite temperature, and finite length lead to characteristic non-monotonic
parameter dependencies of the average current. We discuss oscillations of the
non-linear current voltage characteristics that arise due to reflections of
plasmon modes at the impurity and quasi Andreev reflections at the contacts,
and show how these oscillations are washed out by decoherence at finite
temperature. Furthermore, the finite frequency current noise is investigated in
detail. We find that the effective charge extracted in the shot noise regime in
the weak backscattering limit decisively depends on the noise frequency
relative to , where is the Fermi velocity, the
Tomonaga Luttinger interaction parameter, and the length of the wire. The
interplay of finite bias, finite temperature, and finite length yields rich
structure in the noise spectrum which crucially depends on the
electron-electron interaction. In particular, the excess noise, defined as the
change of the noise due to the applied voltage, can become negative and is
non-vanishing even for noise frequencies larger than the applied voltage, which
are signatures of correlation effects.Comment: 28 pages, 19 figures, published version with minor change
Braiding of anyonic quasiparticles in the charge transfer statistics of symmetric fractional edge-state Mach-Zehnder interferometer
We have studied the zero-temperature statistics of the charge transfer
between the two edges of Quantum Hall liquids of, in general, different filling
factors, , with , forming
Mach-Zehnder interferometer. General expression for the cumulant generating
function in the large-time limit is obtained for symmetric interferometer with
equal propagation times along the two edges between the contacts and constant
bias voltage. The low-voltage limit of the generating function can be
interpreted in terms of the regular Poisson process of electron tunneling,
while its leading large-voltage asymptotics is proven to coincide with the
solution of kinetic equation describing quasiparticle transitions between the
states of the interferometer with different effective flux through it,
where . For , this dynamics reflects both the
fractional charge and the fractional statistical angle of the
tunneling quasiparticles. Explicit expressions for the second (shot noise) and
third cumulants are obtained, and their voltage dependence is analyzed.Comment: 11 two-column pages, 4 figure
Probing qubit dynamics at the tunneling Fermi-edge singularity with alternating current
We consider tunneling of spinless electrons from a single-channel emitter into an empty collector through an interacting resonant level of the quantum dot. When all Coulomb screening of sudden charge variations of the dot during the tunneling is realized by the emitter channel, the system is described with an exactly solvable model of a dissipative qubit. To study manifestations of the coherent qubit dynamics in the collector ac response we derive a solution to the corresponding Bloch equation for the model quantum evolution in the presence of the oscillating voltage of frequency ω and calculate perturbatively the ac response in the voltage amplitude. We have shown that in a wide range of the model parameters the coherent qubit dynamics results in the nonzero frequencies resonances in the amplitudes dependence of the ac harmonics and in the jumps of the harmonics phase shifts across the resonances. In the first order the ac response is directly related to the spectral decomposition of the corresponding transient current and contains only the first ω harmonic, whose amplitude exhibits resonance at ω=ωI, where ωI is the qubit oscillation frequency. In the second order we have obtained the 2ω harmonic of the ac response with resonances in the frequency dependence of its amplitude at ωI,ωI/2 and zero frequency and also have found the frequency dependent shift of the average steady current
Fractional charge in transport through a 1D correlated insulator of finite length
Transport through a one channel wire of length confined between two leads
is examined when the 1D electron system has an energy gap : induced by the interaction in charge mode (: charge velocity in the
wire). In spinless case the transformation of the leads electrons into the
charge density wave solitons of fractional charge entails a non-trivial low
energy crossover from the Fermi liquid behavior below the crossover energy to the insulator one with the
fractional charge in current vs. voltage, conductance vs. temperature, and in
shot noise. Similar behavior is predicted for the Mott insulator of filling
factor .Comment: 5 twocolumn pages in RevTex, no figure
Detecting synchronization of self-sustained oscillators by external driving with varying frequency
We propose a method for detecting the presence of synchronization of
self-sustained oscillator by external driving with linearly varying frequency.
The method is based on a continuous wavelet transform of the signals of
self-sustained oscillator and external force and allows one to distinguish the
case of true synchronization from the case of spurious synchronization caused
by linear mixing of the signals. We apply the method to driven van der Pol
oscillator and to experimental data of human heart rate variability and
respiration.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Threshold features in transport through a 1D constriction
Suppression of electron current through a 1D channel of length
connecting two Fermi liquid reservoirs is studied taking into account the
Umklapp electron-electron interaction induced by a periodic potential. This
interaction causes Hubbard gaps for . In the perturbative
regime where ( charge velocity), and for small deviations
of the electron density from its commensurate values
can diverge with some exponent as voltage or temperature decreases above
, while it goes to zero below . This results
in a nonmonotonous behavior of the conductance.Comment: Final variant published in PRL, 79, 1714; minor correction
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