63 research outputs found

    Imaginary Squashing Mode Spectroscopy of Helium Three B

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    We have made precision measurements of the frequency of a collective mode of the superfluid 3He-B order parameter, the J=2- imaginary squashing mode. Measurements were performed at multiple pressures using interference of transverse sound in an acoustic cavity. Transverse waves propagate in the vicinity of this order parameter mode owing to off-resonant coupling. At the crossing of the sound mode and the order parameter mode, the sound wave is strongly attenuated. We use both velocity and attenuation measurements to determine precise values of the mode frequency with a resolution between 0.1% and 0.25%.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to proceedings of Quantum Fluids and Solids (QFS) Conference 2006; revised 9/26/0

    Vortex core transitions in superfluid 3He in globally anisotropic aerogels

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    Core structures of a single vortex in A-like and B-like phases of superfluid 3He in uniaxially compressed and stretched aerogels are studied by numerically solving Ginzburg-Landau equations derived microscopically. It is found that, although any uniaxial deformation leads to a wider A-like phase with the axial pairing in the pressure-temperature phase diagram, the vortex core states in the two phases in aerogel depend highly on the type of deformation. In a compressed aerogel, the first-order vortex core transition (VCT) previously seen in the bulk B phase appears at any pressure in the B-like phase while no strange vortex core is expected in the corresponding A-like phase. By contrast, in a stretched aerogel, the VCT in the B-like phase is lost while another VCT is expected to occur between a nonunitary core and a polar one in the A-like phase. Experimental search for these results is hoped to understand correlation between superfluid 3He and aerogel structure.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures Text was changed. Resubmitted versio

    Weak localization and conductance fluctuations of a chaotic quantum dot with tunable spin-orbit coupling

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    In a two-dimensional quantum dot in a GaAs heterostructure, the spin-orbit scattering rate is substantially reduced below the rate in a bulk two-dimensional electron gas [B.I. Halperin et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 2106 (2001)]. Such a reduction can be undone if the spin-orbit coupling parameters acquire a spatial dependence, which can be achieved, e.g., by a metal gate covering only a part of the quantum dot. We calculate the effect of such spatially non-uniform spin-orbit scattering on the weak localization correction and the universal conductance fluctuations of a chaotic quantum dot coupled to electron reservoirs by ballistic point contacts, in the presence of a magnetic field parallel to the plane of the quantum dot.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX; 2 figures. Substantial revision

    Globally Anisotropic High Porosity Silica Aerogels

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    We discuss two methods by which high porosity silica aerogels can be engineered to exhibit global anisotropy. First, anisotropy can be introduced with axial strain. In addition, intrinsic anisotropy can result during growth and drying stages and, suitably controlled, it can be correlated with preferential radial shrinkage in cylindrical samples. We have performed small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to characterize these two types of anisotropy. We show that global anisotropy originating from either strain or shrinkage leads to optical birefringence and that optical cross-polarization studies are a useful characterization of the uniformity of the imposed global anisotropy.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Journal of Non-Crystalline Solid

    Hamiltonian theory of gaps, masses and polarization in quantum Hall states: full disclosure

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    I furnish details of the hamiltonian theory of the FQHE developed with Murthy for the infrared, which I subsequently extended to all distances and apply it to Jain fractions \nu = p/(2ps + 1). The explicit operator description in terms of the CF allows one to answer quantitative and qualitative issues, some of which cannot even be posed otherwise. I compute activation gaps for several potentials, exhibit their particle hole symmetry, the profiles of charge density in states with a quasiparticles or hole, (all in closed form) and compare to results from trial wavefunctions and exact diagonalization. The Hartree-Fock approximation is used since much of the nonperturbative physics is built in at tree level. I compare the gaps to experiment and comment on the rough equality of normalized masses near half and quarter filling. I compute the critical fields at which the Hall system will jump from one quantized value of polarization to another, and the polarization and relaxation rates for half filling as a function of temperature and propose a Korringa like law. After providing some plausibility arguments, I explore the possibility of describing several magnetic phenomena in dirty systems with an effective potential, by extracting a free parameter describing the potential from one data point and then using it to predict all the others from that sample. This works to the accuracy typical of this theory (10 -20 percent). I explain why the CF behaves like free particle in some magnetic experiments when it is not, what exactly the CF is made of, what one means by its dipole moment, and how the comparison of theory to experiment must be modified to fit the peculiarities of the quantized Hall problem

    High frequency sound in superfluid 3He-B

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    We present measurements of the absolute phase velocity of transverse and longitudinal sound in superfluid 3He-B at low temperature, extending from the imaginary squashing mode to near pair-breaking. Changes in the transverse phase velocity near pair-breaking have been explained in terms of an order parameter collective mode that arises from f-wave pairing interactions, the so-called J=4- mode. Using these measurements, we establish lower bounds on the energy gap in the B-phase. Measurement of attenuation of longitudinal sound at low temperature and energies far above the pair-breaking threshold, are in agreement with the lower bounds set on pair-breaking. Finally, we discuss our estimations for the strength of the f-wave pairing interactions and the Fermi liquid parameter, F4s.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted to J. Low Temp. Phy

    Orbital and spin contributions to the gg-tensors in metal nanoparticles

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    We present a theoretical study of the mesoscopic fluctuations of gg-tensors in a metal nanoparticle. The calculations were performed using a semi-realistic tight-binding model, which contains both spin and orbital contributions to the gg-tensors. The results depend on the product of the spin-orbit scattering time τso\tau_{\textrm{\small so}} and the mean-level spacing δ\delta, but are otherwise weakly affected by the specific shape of a {\it generic} nanoparticle. We find that the spin contribution to the gg-tensors agrees with Random Matrix Theory (RMT) predictions. On the other hand, in the strong spin-orbit coupling limit δτso/0\delta \tau_{\textrm{\small so}}/\hbar \to 0, the orbital contribution depends crucially on the space character of the quasi-particle wavefunctions: it levels off at a small value for states of dd character but is strongly enhanced for states of spsp character. Our numerical results demonstrate that when orbital coupling to the field is included, RMT predictions overestimate the typical gg-factor of orbitals that have dominant dd-character. This finding points to a possible source of the puzzling discrepancy between theory and experiment.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Electronic excitations and the tunneling spectra of metallic nanograins

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    Tunneling-induced electronic excitations in a metallic nanograin are classified in terms of {\em generations}: subspaces of excitations containing a specific number of electron-hole pairs. This yields a hierarchy of populated excited states of the nanograin that strongly depends on (a) the available electronic energy levels; and (b) the ratio between the electronic relaxation rate within the nano-grain and the bottleneck rate for tunneling transitions. To study the response of the electronic energy level structure of the nanograin to the excitations, and its signature in the tunneling spectrum, we propose a microscopic mean-field theory. Two main features emerge when considering an Al nanograin coated with Al oxide: (i) The electronic energy response fluctuates strongly in the presence of disorder, from level to level and excitation to excitation. Such fluctuations produce a dramatic sample dependence of the tunneling spectra. On the other hand, for excitations that are energetically accessible at low applied bias voltages, the magnitude of the response, reflected in the renormalization of the single-electron energy levels, is smaller than the average spacing between energy levels. (ii) If the tunneling and electronic relaxation time scales are such as to admit a significant non-equilibrium population of the excited nanoparticle states, it should be possible to realize much higher spectral densities of resonances than have been observed to date in such devices. These resonances arise from tunneling into ground-state and excited electronic energy levels, as well as from charge fluctuations present during tunneling.Comment: Submitted to the Physical Review

    Hamiltonian Theory of the FQHE: Conserving Approximation for Incompressible Fractions

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    A microscopic Hamiltonian theory of the FQHE developed by Shankar and the present author based on the fermionic Chern-Simons approach has recently been quite successful in calculating gaps and finite tempertature properties in Fractional Quantum Hall states. Initially proposed as a small-qq theory, it was subsequently extended by Shankar to form an algebraically consistent theory for all qq in the lowest Landau level. Such a theory is amenable to a conserving approximation in which the constraints have vanishing correlators and decouple from physical response functions. Properties of the incompressible fractions are explored in this conserving approximation, including the magnetoexciton dispersions and the evolution of the small-qq structure factor as \nu\to\half. Finally, a formalism capable of dealing with a nonuniform ground state charge density is developed and used to show how the correct fractional value of the quasiparticle charge emerges from the theory.Comment: 15 pages, 2 eps figure

    Tunable variation of optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles

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    Optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles of various sizes (diameter 3-6 nm) have been studied. We present a new scheme to extract size dependent variation of total dielectric function of gold nanoparticles from measured UV-Vis absorption data. The new scheme can also be used, in principle, for other related systems as well. We show how quantum effect, surface atomic co - ordination and polymer - nanoparticle interface morphology leads to a systematic variation in inter band part of the dielectric function of gold nanoparticles, obtained from the analysis using our new scheme. Careful analysis enables identification of the possible changes to the electronic band structure in such nanoparticles.Comment: 13 pages,7 figures, 1 tabl
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