225 research outputs found
Fermi edge singularity and finite frequency spectral features in a semi-infinite 1D wire
We theoretically study a charge qubit interacting with electrons in a
semi-infinite 1D wire. The system displays the physics of the Fermi edge
singularity. Our results generalize known results for the Fermi-edge system to
the regime where excitations induced by the qubit can resolve the spatial
structure of the scattering region. We find resonant features in the qubit
tunneling rate as a function of the qubit level splitting. They occur at
integer multiples of h times v_F/l. Here v_F is the Fermi velocity of the
electrons in the wire, and l is the distance from the tip of the wire to the
point where it interacts with the qubit. These features are due to a single
coherent charge fluctuation in the electron gas, with a half-wavelength that
fits into l an integer number of times. As the coupling between the qubit and
the wire is increased, the resonances are washed out. This is a clear signature
of the increasingly violent Fermi-sea shake-up that accompanies strong
coupling.Comment: 11 page
Exciting half-integer charges in a quantum point contact
We study a voltage-driven quantum point contact (QPC) strongly coupled to a
qubit. We predict pronounced observable features in the QPC current that can be
interpreted in terms of half-integer charge transfers. Our analysis is based on
the Keldysh generating functional approach and contains general results, valid
for all coherent conductors.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Ballistic transmission through a graphene bilayer
We calculate the Fermi energy dependence of the (time-averaged) current and
shot noise in an impurity-free carbon bilayer (length width ), and
compare with known results for a monolayer. At the Dirac point of charge
neutrality, the bilayer transmits as two independent monolayers in parallel:
Both current and noise are resonant at twice the monolayer value, so that their
ratio (the Fano factor) has the same 1/3 value as in a monolayer -- and the
same value as in a diffusive metal. The range of Fermi energies around the
Dirac point within which this pseudo-diffusive result holds is smaller,
however, in a bilayer than in a monolayer (by a factor , with
the interlayer coupling length).Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, version to appear in PR
Analysis and Applications of the Generalised Dyson Mapping
Generalised Dyson boson-fermion mappings are considered. These are techniques
used in the analysis of the quantum many-body problem, and are instances of
so-called boson expansion methods. A generalised Dyson boson-fermion mapping is
a one-to-one linear but non-unitary operator that can be applied to vectors
representing the states of a many-fermion system. A vector representing a
fermion system maps onto a vector that represents a state of a many-body system
that contains both bosons and fermions. The motivation for doing such a mapping
is the hope that it will reveal some property of the system that simplifies its
analysis and that was hidden in the original form. The aims of this text are to
review the theory of generalized Dyson boson-fermion mappings and to find a
useful application for a generalized Dyson boson-fermion mapping, by
considering a non-trivial model, namely the Richardson model for
superconductivity. It is the first time that a boson expansion technique is
implemented for a system where the roles of both collective and non-collective
fermion pairs are important. The Dyson mapping uncovers non-trivial properties
of the system that aid the construction of time-independent as well as
time-dependent perturbation expansions. The time-independent expansions agree
with results that other authors have obtained through methods other than boson
expansions. The time-dependent expansions might in future prove useful in
understanding aspects of the dynamics of ultra-cold fermi gases, when
time-dependent magnetic fields are used to vary the atom-atom interaction
strenght.Comment: 117 pages, one figure. Thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the
requirements for the degree of 'Master of Science' at the University of
Stellenbosch, South Afric
Valley-isospin dependence of the quantum Hall effect in a graphene p-n junction
We calculate the conductance G of a bipolar junction in a graphene
nanoribbon, in the high-magnetic field regime where the Hall conductance in the
p-doped and n-doped regions is 2e^2/h. In the absence of intervalley
scattering, the result G=(e^2/h)(1-cos Phi) depends only on the angle Phi
between the valley isospins (= Bloch vectors representing the spinor of the
valley polarization) at the two opposite edges. This plateau in the conductance
versus Fermi energy is insensitive to electrostatic disorder, while it is
destabilized by the dispersionless edge state which may exist at a zigzag
boundary. A strain-induced vector potential shifts the conductance plateau up
or down by rotating the valley isospin.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
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