14,953 research outputs found

    Phonon emission and arrival times of electrons from a single-electron source

    Get PDF
    In recent charge-pump experiments, single electrons are injected into quantum Hall edge channels at energies significantly above the Fermi level. We consider here the relaxation of these hot edge-channel electrons through longitudinal-optical-phonon emission. Our results show that the probability for an electron in the outermost edge channel to emit one or more phonons en route to a detector some microns distant along the edge channel suffers a double-exponential suppression with increasing magnetic field. This explains recent experimental observations. We also describe how the shape of the arrival-time distribution of electrons at the detector reflects the velocities of the electronic states post phonon emission. We show how this can give rise to pronounced oscillations in the arrival-time-distribution width as a function of magnetic field or electron energy

    Field-driven topological glass transition in a model flux line lattice

    Full text link
    We show that the flux line lattice in a model layered HTSC becomes unstable above a critical magnetic field with respect to a plastic deformation via penetration of pairs of point-like disclination defects. The instability is characterized by the competition between the elastic and the pinning energies and is essentially assisted by softening of the lattice induced by a dimensional crossover of the fluctuations as field increases. We confirm through a computer simulation that this indeed may lead to a phase transition from crystalline order at low fields to a topologically disordered phase at higher fields. We propose that this mechanism provides a model of the low temperature field--driven disordering transition observed in neutron diffraction experiments on Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8{\rm Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8\, } single crystals.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures available upon request via snail mail from [email protected]

    Nonmetallic Low-Temperature Normal State of K0.70Fe1.46Se1.85Te0.15

    Full text link
    The normal-state in-plane resistivity below the zero-field superconducting transition temperature TcT_c and the upper critical field Hc2 were measured by suppressing superconductivity in pulsed magnetic fields for K0.70Fe1.46Se1.85Te0.15. The normal-state resistivity ρab\rho_{ab} is found to increase logarithmically with decrasing temperature as TTc0\frac{T}{T_c}\rightarrow 0. Similar to granular metals, our results suggest that a superconductor - insulator transition below zero-field Tc_{c} may be induced in high magnetic fields. This is related to the intrinsic real-space phase-separated states common to all inhomogeneous superconductors.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    Observation of persistent flow of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a toroidal trap

    Full text link
    We have observed the persistent flow of Bose-condensed atoms in a toroidal trap. The flow persists without decay for up to 10 s, limited only by experimental factors such as drift and trap lifetime. The quantized rotation was initiated by transferring one unit, \hbar, of the orbital angular momentum from Laguerre-Gaussian photons to each atom. Stable flow was only possible when the trap was multiply-connected, and was observed with a BEC fraction as small as 15%. We also created flow with two units of angular momentum, and observed its splitting into two singly-charged vortices when the trap geometry was changed from multiply- to simply-connected.Comment: 1 file, 5 figure
    corecore