129 research outputs found
Photovoltaic and Rectification Currents in Quantum Dots
We investigate theoretically and experimentally the statistical properties of
dc current through an open quantum dot subject to ac excitation of a
shape-defining gate. The symmetries of rectification current and photovoltaic
current with respect to applied magnetic field are examined. Theory and
experiment are found to be in good agreement throughout a broad range of
frequency and ac power, ranging from adiabatic to nonadiabatic regimes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; related articles at http://marcuslab.harvard.ed
L\'{e}vy flights in quantum transport in quasi-ballistic wires
Conductance fluctuations, localization and statistics of Lyapunov exponents
are studied numerically in pure metallic wires with rough boundaries
(quasi-ballistic wires). We find that the correlation energy of conductance
fluctuations scales anomalously with the sample dimensions, indicating the role
of L\'{e}vy flights. Application of a magnetic field deflects the L\'{e}vy
flights which reduces the localization length. This deflection also breaks the
geometrical flux cancellation and restores the usual Aharonov-Bohm type
magneto-conductance fluctuations.Comment: Available also at http://roberto.fis.uniroma3.it/leadbeat/pub.htm
Interplay between spin-relaxation and Andreev reflection in ferromagnetic wires with superconducting contacts
We analyze the change in the resistance of a junction between a diffusive
ferromagnetic (F) wire and normal metal electrode, due to the onset of
superconductivity (S) in the latter and a double Andreev scattering process
leading to a complete internal reflection of a large fraction of the
spin-polarized electrons back into the ferromagnet. The superconducting
transition results in an additional contact resistance arising from the
necessity to match spin-polarized current in F-wire to spin-less current in
S-reservoir, which is comparable to the resistance of a piece of a F-wire with
the length equal to the spin-relaxation length.Comment: 4 pages, 2 fig
Directed electron transport through ballistic quantum dot under microwave radiation
Rectification of microwave radiation by asymmetric, ballistic quantum dot is
observed. The directed transport is studied at different frequency (1-40 GHz)
temperatures (0.3K-6K)and magnetic field. Dramatic reduction of the
rectification is found in magnetic fields at which the cyclotron (Larmor)
radius of the electron orbits at Fermi level is smaller than the size of the
quantum dot. It strongly suggests the ballistic nature of the observed
nonlinear phenomena. Both symmetric and anti-symmetric with respect to the
magnetic field contributions to the directed transport are presented. We have
found that the behavior of the symmetric part of the rectified voltage with the
magnetic field is different significantly for microwaves with different
frequencies. A ballistic model of the directed transport is proposed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Light scattering by a medium with a spatially modulated optical conductivity: the case of graphene
We describe light scattering from a graphene sheet having a modulated optical
conductivity. We show that such modulation enables the excitation of surface
plasmon-polaritons by an electromagnetic wave impinging at normal incidence.
The resulting surface plasmon-polaritons are responsible for a substantial
increase of electromagnetic radiation absorption by the graphene sheet. The
origin of the modulation can be due either to a periodic strain field or to
adatoms (or absorbed molecules) with a modulated adsorption profile.Comment: http://iopscience.iop.org/0953-8984/24/24/24530
Multiphoton Processes in Driven Mesoscopic Systems
We study the statistics of multi-photon absorption/emission processes in a
mesoscopic ring threaded by an harmonic time-dependent flux . For this
sake, we demonstrate a useful analogy between the Keldysh quantum kinetic
equation for the electrons distribution function and a Continuous Time Random
Walk in energy space with corrections due to interference effects. Studying the
probability to absorb/emit quanta per scattering event, we
explore the crossover between ultra-quantum/low-intensity limit and
quasi-classical/high-intensity regime, and the role of multiphoton processes in
driving it.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, extended versio
Photovoltaic Current Response of Mesoscopic Conductors to Quantized Cavity Modes
We extend the analysis of the effects of electromagnetic (EM) fields on
mesoscopic conductors to include the effects of field quantization, motivated
by recent experiments on circuit QED. We show that in general there is a
photovoltaic (PV) current induced by quantized cavity modes at zero bias across
the conductor. This current depends on the average photon occupation number and
vanishes identically when it is equal to the average number of thermal
electron-hole pairs. We analyze in detail the case of a chaotic quantum dot at
temperature T_e in contact with a thermal EM field at temperature T_f,
calculating the RMS size of the PV current as a function of the temperature
difference, finding an effect ~pA.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Statistics of delay times in mesoscopic systems as a manifestation of eigenfunction fluctuations
We reveal a general explicit relation between the statistics of delay times
in one-channel reflection from a mesoscopic sample of any spatial dimension and
the statistics of the eigenfunction intensities in its closed counterpart. This
opens a possibility to use experimentally measurable delay times as a sensitive
probe of eigenfunction fluctuations. For the particular case of quasi-one
dimensional geometry of the sample we use an alternative technique to derive
the probability density of partial delay times for any number of open channels.Comment: 12 pages; published version with updated reference
Statistics of Rare Events in Disordered Conductors
Asymptotic behavior of distribution functions of local quantities in
disordered conductors is studied in the weak disorder limit by means of an
optimal fluctuation method. It is argued that this method is more appropriate
for the study of seldom occurring events than the approaches based on nonlinear
-models because it is capable of correctly handling fluctuations of the
random potential with large amplitude as well as the short-scale structure of
the corresponding solutions of the Schr\"{o}dinger equation. For two- and
three-dimensional conductors new asymptotics of the distribution functions are
obtained which in some cases differ significantly from previously established
results.Comment: 17 pages, REVTeX 3.0 and 1 Postscript figur
Chiral phase transition in lattice QCD as a metal-insulator transition
We investigate the lattice QCD Dirac operator with staggered fermions at
temperatures around the chiral phase transition. We present evidence of a
metal-insulator transition in the low lying modes of the Dirac operator around
the same temperature as the chiral phase transition. This strongly suggests the
phenomenon of Anderson localization drives the QCD vacuum to the chirally
symmetric phase in a way similar to a metal-insulator transition in a
disordered conductor. We also discuss how Anderson localization affects the
usual phenomenological treatment of phase transitions a la Ginzburg-Landau.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, references added, typos corrected, journal
versio
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