28,196 research outputs found
Landau Ginzburg Theory and Nuclear Matter at Finite Temperature
Based on recent studies of the temperature dependence of the energy and
specific heat of liquid nuclear matter, a phase transition is suggested at a
temperature MeV. We apply Landau Ginzburg theory to this transition
and determine the behaviour of the energy and specific heat close to the
critical temperature in the condensed phase.Comment: 10 pages, Revte
Polarization correlated photons from a positively charged quantum dot
Polarized cross-correlation spectroscopy on a quantum dot charged with a
single hole shows the sequential emission of photons with common circular
polarization. This effect is visible without magnetic field, but becomes more
pronounced as the field along the quantization axis is increased. We interpret
the data in terms of electron dephasing in the X+ state caused by the
Overhauser field of nuclei in the dot. We predict the correlation timescale can
be increased by accelerating the emission rate with cavity-QED
Giant Fluctuations of Coulomb Drag in a Bilayer System
We have observed reproducible fluctuations of the Coulomb drag, both as a
function of magnetic field and electron concentration, which are a
manifestation of quantum interference of electrons in the layers. At low
temperatures the fluctuations exceed the average drag, giving rise to random
changes of the sign of the drag. The fluctuations are found to be much larger
than previously expected, and we propose a model which explains their
enhancement by considering fluctuations of local electron properties.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Multiphase smoothed-particle hydrodynamics
We adapt the smoothed-particle hydrodynamics (SPH) technique to allow a multiphase fluid in which SPH particles of widely differing density may be freely intermixed. Applications include modelling of galaxy formation and cooling flows
Anomalous spin-dependent behaviour of one-dimensional subbands
We report a new electron interaction effect in GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wires.
Using DC-bias spectroscopy, we show that large and abrupt changes occur to the
energies of spin-down (lower energy) states as they populate. The effect is not
observed for spin-up energy states. At B=0, interactions have a pronounced
effect, in the form of the well-known 0.7 Structure. However, our new results
show that interactions strongly affect the energy spectrum at all magnetic
fields, from 0 to 16T, not just in the vicinity of the 0.7 Structure.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Movie of the interplanetary magnetic field
Description of movie representing IMP-1 MAGNETOMETER observations of interplanetary magnetic fiel
Observation of a two-dimensional spin-lattice in non-magnetic semiconductor heterostructures
Tunable magnetic interactions in high-mobility nonmagnetic semiconductor
heterostructures are centrally important to spin-based quantum technologies.
Conventionally, this requires incorporation of "magnetic impurities" within the
two-dimensional (2D) electron layer of the heterostructures, which is achieved
either by doping with ferromagnetic atoms, or by electrostatically printing
artificial atoms or quantum dots. Here we report experimental evidence of a
third, and intrinsic, source of localized spins in high-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs
heterostructures, which are clearly observed in the limit of large setback
distance (=80 nm) in modulation doping. Local nonequilibrium transport
spectroscopy in these systems reveals existence of multiple spins, which are
located in a quasi-regular manner in the 2D Fermi sea, and mutually interact at
temperatures below 100 milliKelvin via the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY)
indirect exchange. The presence of such a spin-array, whose microscopic origin
appears to be disorder-bound, simulates a 2D lattice-Kondo system with
gate-tunable energy scales.Comment: 7 pages + 4 figs. To appear in Nature Physics. This is the original
submitted version. Final version will be posted six months after publication.
The Supplementary Information can be downloaded from:
http://www.physics.iisc.ernet.in/~arindam/Supplementary_Information_NPHYS-2006-08-0
0812B.pd
Ballistic electron spectroscopy
We demonstrate the feasibility of ballistic electron spectroscopy as a new
tool for mesoscopic physics. A quantum dot is utilised as an energy-selective
detector of non-equilibrium ballistic electrons injected into a two-dimensional
electron system. In this paper we use a second quantum dot as the electron
injector to evaluate the scheme. We propose an application in the study of
interacting 1D and 0D systems.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Plasmon excitation by charged particles interacting with metal surfaces
Recent experiments (R. A. Baragiola and C. A. Dukes, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf
76}, 2547 (1996)) with slow ions incident at grazing angle on metal surfaces
have shown that bulk plasmons are excited under conditions where the ions do
not penetrate the surface, contrary to the usual statement that probes exterior
to an electron gas do not couple to the bulk plasmon. We here use the quantized
hydrodynamic model of the bounded electron gas to derive an explicit expression
for the probability of bulk plasmon excitation by external charged particles
moving parallel to the surface. Our results indicate that for each
(the surface plasmon wave vector) there exists a continuum of bulk plasmon
excitations, which we also observe within the semi-classical infinite-barrier
(SCIB) model of the surface.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, o appear in Phys. Lett.
Energy-Tunable Quantum Dot with Minimal Fine Structure Created by Using Simultaneous Electric and Magnetic Fields
The neutral biexciton cascade of single quantum dots is a promising source of
entangled photon pairs. The character of the entangled state is determined by
the energy difference between the excitonic eigenstates known as fine-structure
splitting (FSS). Here we reduce the magnitude of the FSS by simultaneously
using two independent tuning mechanisms: in-plane magnetic field and vertical
electric field. We observe that there exists a minimum possible FSS in each
quantum dot which is independent of these tuning mechanisms. However, with
simultaneous application of electric and magnetic fields, we show the FSS can
be reduced to its minimum value as the energy of emission is tuned over several
meV with a 5-T magnet
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