1,315 research outputs found

    Full Counting Statistics of Spin Currents

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    We discuss how to detect fluctuating spin currents and derive full counting statistics of electron spin transfers. It is interesting to consider several detectors in series that simultaneously monitor different components of the spins transferred. We have found that in general the statistics of the measurement outcomes cannot be explained with the projection postulate and essentially depends on the quantum dynamics of the detectors.Comment: twocolumns, 4 pages, 2 figure

    Feedback of the electromagnetic environment on current and voltage fluctuations out of equilibrium

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    A theory is presented for low-frequency current and voltage correlators of a mesoscopic conductor embedded in a macroscopic electromagnetic environment. This Keldysh field theory evaluated at its saddle-point provides the microscopic justification for our earlier phenomenological calculation (using the cascaded Langevin approach). The nonlinear feedback from the environment mixes correlators of different orders, which explains the unexpected temperature dependence of the third moment of tunneling noise observed in a recent experiment. At non-zero temperature, current and voltage correlators of order three and higher are no longer linearly related. We show that a Hall bar measures voltage correlators in the longitudinal voltage and current correlators in the Hall voltage. We go beyond the saddle-point approximation to consider the environmental Coulomb blockade. We derive that the leading order Coulomb blockade correction to the n-th cumulant of current fluctuations is proportional to the voltage derivative of the (n+1)-th cumulant, generalizing to any n the earlier results for n=1,2.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure

    Temperature dependent third cumulant of tunneling noise

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    Poisson statistics predicts that the shot noise in a tunnel junction has a temperature independent third cumulant e^2\I, determined solely by the mean current I. Experimental data, however, show a puzzling temperature dependence. We demonstrate theoretically that the third cumulant becomes strongly temperature dependent and may even change sign as a result of feedback from the electromagnetic environment. In the limit of a noninvasive (zero-impedance) measurement circuit in thermal equilibrium with the junction, we find that the third cumulant crosses over from e^2/I at low temperatures to -e^2/I at high temperatures.Comment: 4 pages including 2 figure

    Spin-transport in multi-terminal normal metal - ferromagnet systems with non-collinear magnetizations

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    A theory of spin-transport in hybrid normal metal - ferromagnetic electronic circuits is developed, taking into account non-collinear spin-accumulation. Spin-transport through resistive elements is described by 4 conductance parameters. Microscopic expression for these conductances are derived in terms of scattering matrices and explicitly calculated for simple models. The circuit theory is applied to 2-terminal and 3-terminal devices attached to ferromagnetic reservoirs.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Eur. Phys. J.

    Secondary "Smile"-gap in the density of states of a diffusive Josephson junction for a wide range of contact types

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    The superconducting proximity effect leads to strong modifications of the local density of states in diffusive or chaotic cavity Josephson junctions, which displays a phase-dependent energy gap around the Fermi energy. The so-called minigap of the order of the Thouless energy EThE_{\mathrm{Th}} is related to the inverse dwell time in the diffusive region in the limit ETh≪ΔE_{\mathrm{Th}}\ll\Delta, where Δ\Delta is the superconducting energy gap. In the opposite limit of a large Thouless energy ETh≫ΔE_{\mathrm{Th}}\gg\Delta, a small new feature has recently attracted attention, namely, the appearance of a further secondary gap, which is around two orders of magnitude smaller compared to the usual superconducting gap. It appears in a chaotic cavity just below the superconducting gap edge Δ\Delta and vanishes for some value of the phase difference between the superconductors. We extend previous theory restricted to a normal cavity connected to two superconductors through ballistic contacts to a wider range of contact types. We show that the existence of the secondary gap is not limited to ballistic contacts, but is a more general property of such systems. Furthermore, we derive a criterion which directly relates the existence of a secondary gap to the presence of small transmission eigenvalues of the contacts. For generic continuous distributions of transmission eigenvalues of the contacts, no secondary gap exists, although we observe a singular behavior of the density of states at Δ\Delta. Finally, we provide a simple one-dimensional scattering model which is able to explain the characteristic "smile" shape of the secondary gap.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure

    "Smile"-gap in the density of states of a cavity between superconductors

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    The density of Andreev levels in a normal metal (NN) in contact with two superconductors (SS) is known to exhibit an induced minigap related to the inverse dwell time. We predict a small secondary gap just below the superconducting gap edge---a feature that has been overlooked so far in numerous studies of the density of states in S−N−SS-N-S structures. In a generic structure with NN being a chaotic cavity, the secondary gap is the widest at zero phase bias. It closes at some finite phase bias, forming the shape of a "smile". Asymmetric couplings give even richer gap structures near the phase difference \pi. All the features found should be amendable to experimental detection in high-resolution low-temperature tunneling spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Non-equilibrium spin accumulation in ferromagnetic single-electron transistors

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    We study transport in ferromagnetic single-electron transistors. The non- equilibrium spin accumulation on the island caused by a finite current through the system is described by a generalized theory of the Coulomb blockade. It enhances the tunnel magnetoresistance and has a drastic effect on the time- dependent transport properties. A transient decay of the spin accumulation may reverse the electric current on time scales of the order of the spin-flip relaxation time. This can be used as an experimental signature of the non- equilibrium spin accumulation.Comment: 9 postscript figures, to appear in The European Physical Journal

    Elementary events of electron transfer in a voltage-driven quantum point contact

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    We show that the statistics of electron transfer in a coherent quantum point contact driven by an arbitrary time-dependent voltage is composed of elementary events of two kinds: unidirectional one-electron transfers determining the average current and bidirectional two-electron processes contributing to the noise only. This result pertains at vanishing temperature while the extended Keldysh-Green's function formalism in use also enables the systematic calculation of the higher-order current correlators at finite temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; to appear in PRL. Version 1 contains additional results for noise and the third cumulant at finite temperatures [Eqs. (19) and (20)

    Full Counting Statistics of Superconductor--Normal-Metal Heterostructures

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    The article develops a powerful theoretical tool to obtain the full counting statistics. By a slight extension of the standard Keldysh method we can access immediately all correlation functions of the current operator. Embedded in a quantum generalization of the circuit theory of electronic transport, we are able to study the full counting statistics of a large class of two-terminal contacts and multi-terminal structures, containing superconductors and normal metals as elements. The practical use of the method is demonstrated in many examples.Comment: 35 pages, contribution to "Quantum Noise", ed. by Yu.V. Nazarov and Ya.M. Blanter, minor changes in text, references adde
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